The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations 3031327802, 9783031327803

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Table of contents :
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgements
Contents
Chapter 1: The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations
Introduction to the Human Locomotor System
Physical Aspects of the Human Locomotor System
The Human Skeleton: Planes of Reference and Directional Terms
Forces in the Musculoskeletal System
Biomechanics of the Locomotor System
Body Planes
Joints
Fibrous Joints
Cartilaginous Joints
Synovial Joints
Movable Joints
Categories of Synovial Joints
Planar Joints
Hinge Joint
Pivot Joint
Condyloid Joint
Saddle Joints
Ball-and-Socket Joints
Mapping Between Upper and Lower Limb Joints
Dynamics of the Upper Extremity
Joints of the Elbow
Wrist Joint
The Lower Extremity
Human Hip Joint
Surrounding Musculature
Knee Joint
Foot and Ankle
Ankle Joint (Talocrural Joint)
Anatomy of the Talocrural Joint (Ankle Joint)
Anatomy of the Subtalar Joint (Tolocalcaneal Joint)
Anatomy of the Midtarsal Joint
Anatomy of the Tarsometatarsal (TMT) Joint Complex
Anatomy of the Metatarsophalangeal (MTP) Joints and Interphalangeal (IP) Joints
The Foot (Categories)
Forefoot
Midfoot
Hindfoot
Muscles Controlling Foot Movements
Foot-Aided Tendons
Primary Ligaments of the Foot
Muscle Physiology of the Human Locomotor System
Physiology of Muscle Activation and Electromyography
Contribution of Muscle to Motion Control
Muscle as a Smart Material with Intrinsic Self-Stabilizing Properties
Cerebral Blood Flow in the Human Locomotor System
Fractal Dynamics in the Human Locomotor System
Perceptual and Feedback: Somatosensory System in the Human Locomotor System
Somatosensory System
Somatosensory Afferents Convey Information from the Skin Surface to Central Circuits
Significance of the Somatosensory System
Information Acquisition Through Proprioception
Exteroception
Information Acquisition Through Exteroception and Interoception
Systems Analysis Approach in Human Locomotor System
The Vestibular System
The Joint Angle Sense (Proprioception)
The Visual Orientation Cues
The Somatosensory Plantar Pressure Receptors
Data Acquisition in Human Locomotor System
Data Acquisition: The Vestibular System
Data Acquisition: The Joint Angle Sensor
Data Acquisition: The Force/Torque Sensor
Data Acquisition: The Psychophysical Evidence for Sensor Concept
The Meta Level Concept
Postural Reflex Concept
Posture-Movement Problem
The Nervous System (CNS, PNS)
The Brain (Cerebral Cortex)
Spinal Cord and Nerves
The Motor System of the Human Body
Important Functions of the Cerebellum
The Motor Cortex
Motor Aspects of the Human Locomotor System
References
Suggested Reading
Chapter 2: Significance in the Understanding of the Human Locomotor System
Introduction
The Human Locomotor System
The Skeletal System
The Muscular System
The Nervous System
The Cardiovascular System
The Respiratory System
The Digestive System
Disabilities, Disorders, Impairments
Neuromuscular Disorders
Musculoskeletal Disorders
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Tendinitis
Shoulder Tendonitis
Wrist Tendonotis
Biceps Tendonitis
Tibialis Posterior Tendinopathy
Quadriceps Tendonitis
Sprain-Strain
Radial Tunnel Syndrome
Degenerative Disc Disease
References
Chapter 3: Challenges and Concerns to Society: The Human Locomotor System
Disability-Adjusted Life Year, DALY
Stroke
Traumatic Brain Injury
Spinal Cord Injuries
Parkinson’s Disease
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Alzheimer’s Disease
Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)
Neurodegeneration
Lumbar Degenerative Disk Disease
Scoliosis
Muscular Dystrophy
Low Back Pain
Myofascial Pain Syndrome
Military Action
Mission Essential Fitness (Military)
Physiological Functions in Human During Spaceflight
Intervening in the Brain
Ethical Concerns and Challenges of New Technology Initiatives
Stigmatization
References
Chapter 4: The Physical Determinants of Human Locomotor System
Description of the Gait Cycle According to Fig. 4.2
Significance of Measuring Physiological/Biomechanical Quantities
The Major Determinants of Human Gait
The Human Pelvis
Ligamentous Pelvic Anatomy
Constituent Mechanisms of Human Gait
Pelvic List (Lateral Tilt) (Pelvic Drop)
Knee Movement During Gait Cycle [1, 5]
Muscle Activation in the Gait Cycle
References
Chapter 5: Measurement in Human Locomotor System
Measurement and Instrumentation
Systems Analysis Approach
Psychophysics and Its Significance
Analysis of Different Types of Joints and Segments
The Acquisition of Biomechanics/Physiological Information
3D Determination of the Head and Neck
Determination of the Shoulder Joint
3D Determination of the Elbow Joint
3D Determination of the Wrist Joint
3D Determination of the Hip Joint
Lumbo-Pelvic Hip Complex
3D Determination of the Knee Joint
3D Determination of the Foot Joint
3D Determination of the Ankle Joint
3D Determination of the Ground Reaction Forces (GRFs)
Regenerative Medicine Procedures
References
Suggested Readings
Chapter 6: Sensors and/or Transducers in Human Locomotor System
The Camera System (The Motion Capture System)
Inertial Motion Units (IMUs)
Goniometer
Electromyography
Strain Gauge
Fiber Optic Sensors (FOS)
Heart Rate Monitoring
Skin Conductivity
Biosensors
Wearable Biosensors
Emerging Technologies in Wearable Biosensors
Biofluid Saliva: As a Chemical Sensor
Biofluid Sweat: As a Non-invasive Sweat Glucose
Biofluid Tears: As a Chemical Sensor
References
Chapter 7: Technology Initiatives in the Human Locomotor System
Review of the Nervous System
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
Principle of the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)
Understanding MRI: Basic MR Physics for Physicians [12]
Origin of the MR Signal: Protons and ‘Little Bar Magnets’ [12]
Precession [12]
Longitudinal Magnetization [12]
RF Pulses and Transverse Magnetization [12]
T1 Relaxation and T1 Values [12]
T2 and T2* Relaxation [12]
Free Induction Decay [12]
T1-Weighted Images [12]
T2-Weighted Images [12]
Factors Influencing SE Contrast and Weighting [12]
Gradient Echo [12]
Differences Between SE and GRE [12]
Image Construction [12]
Localizing and Encoding MR Signals
Slice-Selection Gradient
Phase-Encoding Gradient
Frequency-Encoding Gradient
Image Acquisition Time
Turbo SE
Echo-Planar Imaging
3D Encoding
Magnetic Susceptibility
Intravenous Contrast
Exploiting Magnetic Susceptibility Using GRE Imaging [12]
Other Factors That May Influence Signal Intensity [12]
TI: The Inversion Recovery Sequence
Flow [12]
Finally, a Word on Safety
Exposure to Magnetic Fields
Intravenous Contrast Agents
Pregnancy and Breastfeeding
Overview of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging [8]
Concept of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) [8]
Analysis Methods [8]
Comparisons with Other Functional Imaging Modalities [8]
Spatial Resolution [8]
Temporal Resolution [8]
Strengths and Weaknesses of fMRI [8]
Future of fMRI [8]
Conclusions [8]
Intervention in the Brain: Current Understanding and Technology Initiatives
Noninvasive Brain Stimulation
Basic Principles of Noninvasive Brain Stimulation
Transcranial Brain Stimulation (TBS)
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS)
Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS)
Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation (TACS)
Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS)
The Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulation
Sub-Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulation
Globus Pallidus Deep Brain Stimulation
Brain-Computer Interface System (BCIS)
Paradigm of the Brain-Computer Interface, BCI
The Output Device
Neural Stem Cell Therapy (NSCT)
References
Chapter 8: Artificial Intelligence in Human Locomotor System
Space Exploration
Application of Human Locomotor System in Surveillance
Emerging Technologies
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Intelligent Measurement and Instrumentation
Case Study I: Measurement Science in the Human Locomotor System
Case Study II: Measurement Science in the Human Locomotor System (Conceptualized and Performed in the Laboratory for Human Motion Analysis and NeuroRehabilitation)
Biosensors
Tongue-Computer Interface
Magnetoelastic Wireless Biosensor
Artificial Neural Networks
Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs)
Computational Intelligence
Application of Computational Intelligence in Human Locomotor System
Notion of Neuromorphic Engineering
References
Index
Recommend Papers

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Thompson Sarkodie-Gyan Huiying Yu

The Human Locomotor System Physiological and Technological Foundations

The Human Locomotor System

Thompson Sarkodie-Gyan • Huiying Yu

The Human Locomotor System Physiological and Technological Foundations

Thompson Sarkodie-Gyan Electrical and Computer Engineering The University of Texas at El Paso El Paso, TX, USA

Huiying Yu Dona Ana Community College - Science Department New Mexico State University Las Cruces, NM, USA

ISBN 978-3-031-32780-3    ISBN 978-3-031-32781-0 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32781-0 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors, and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. This Springer imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland

Foreword

Huiying Yu and Thompson Sarkodie-Gyan have co-authored a book that presents the biomechanical and physiological principles underlying the human locomotor system. The book covers cutting-edge technologies for, for example, biosensors and wearable devices that enable such technologies as brain-machine interfaces and explores the role of artificial intelligence and computational modeling in enhancing the performance of the human locomotor system. This book provides a comprehensive foundation for understanding both the normal and pathological aspects of the human locomotor system. It is a valuable resource that can serve as a basis for further investigation in fields such as medicine, rehabilitation, neurology, degenerative diseases, and physiology. By applying the knowledge gained from this book, researchers and practitioners can integrate the information in this book to help guide work toward developing innovative solutions to improve human health and wellbeing. At this critical juncture, there is an urgent need to address the challenges faced by older adults and individuals with disabling diseases, as well as to harness technological advancements to enhance their quality of life and independence. This book focuses on the physical, perceptual, and motor aspects of the human locomotor system, with a special emphasis on neuroscience and cognitive science research for progressive degenerative diseases and age-related cognitive decline. It highlights the importance of measurement and instrumentation in healthcare technology, as they enable accurate diagnosis, monitoring of patient conditions, and efficient administration of therapeutic treatments.

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Foreword

This book will serve as a helpful resource for a wide range of professionals, including professors, graduate students, rehabilitation engineers, neuroscientists, sensorimotor scientists, space biomedical researchers, human motion analysts, and biomedical engineers specializing in prosthetics, assistive technologies, and other medical devices. Its interdisciplinary approach makes it an important reference for anyone working in the fields of human locomotion and healthcare technology. FISA Foundation – Paralyzed Veterans of America Distinguished Professor University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Rory A. Cooper

Preface

The human locomotor system is a very complex multisystem. It involves components including, but not limited to, physical, perceptual, and motor aspects. This complexity further translates into the interactions among muscles, sense organs, motor pattern generators, and the central nervous system (CNS) toward creating intelligence in mobility. The CNS controls all body activities, from heart rate and sexual functions to emotion, learning, and memory. It shapes our thoughts, hopes, dreams, and imagination and is what makes us human. The neuromusculoskeletal system (neural control of the musculoskeletal system) enables intelligent behaviors, including walking, swimming, running, crawling, reaching, capturing, and grasping, among many other locomotive and manipulation activities. However, musculoskeletal conditions are the most common cause of severe long-term pain, functional limitations, physical disability, and social and economic implications, affecting most people worldwide. Furthermore, several illnesses, infections, and injuries that cause damage to the brain and its functions may lead to serious disorders that affect memory, cognition, movement, or consciousness or cause conditions such as chronic pain. The chronic pain and physical disability brought about by musculoskeletal conditions affect social functioning and mental health, further diminishing the quality of the patient. There is a significant thrust within the scientific community seeking to understand how the muscles, sense organs, motor pattern generators, and the brain interact toward creating mobility and other functions. Understanding of the neuromusculoskeletal system may assist to ameliorate human health problems that may involve the design of prosthetics, the restoration of movement following brain or spinal cord injury, as well as the design, actuation, and control of mobile robots. Current medical interventions remain marginal and unable to offer prevention and effective treatment for most chronic musculoskeletal conditions because their etiology and pathogenesis are unknown. This is a result of our marginal understanding of the functions of the locomotor system in both healthy and unhealthy states. Sensorimotor physiologists have attempted to dissect the musculoskeletal system into simple elementary mechanisms to derive an integrative understanding of locomotor behavior. Furthermore, there have been attempts to elucidate the vii

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Preface

mechanisms underlying intelligent adaptive behavior in the locomotor system. These attempts have involved the direct capture of the activities of the neuronal system in human locomotion. They do not, however, clarify how the nervous system adaptively functions as a dynamic system and how it effectively coordinates adaptive interactions with the musculoskeletal system during locomotion. Other studies have tried to artificially emulate locomotion by using mathematical models and robots based on control of a robot simulation model. This does not lead to understanding biological locomotor mechanisms, as the control laws are artificially constructed solely based on an engineering perspective independent of actual biological mechanisms. This book is currently at a pivotal point for recognizing the need to respond to the needs of the aging and disabling diseases, coupled with technology initiatives for maintaining independence and reasonable quality of life; and neuroscience and cognitive science research into progressive degenerative diseases and age-related cognitive decline. The book addresses the human locomotor system’s physical, perceptual, and motor aspects. It introduces the science of measurement and instrumentation as a significant aspect of the technology initiatives because it grants us good diagnosis, monitors patient condition, and administers therapeutic treatments both reliably and efficiently. This book introduces the biomechanical and physiological foundations of the locomotor system. Furthermore, the book introduces technologies for intervening in the brain, technologies including biosensors and wearable biosensors, and the application of artificial and computational intelligence in the human locomotor system. Following the introduction of the physiological and technological foundations, the authors have exposed the challenges and associated opportunities of the locomotor system to the readership. This book may serve as a foundation for describing the normal and abnormal human locomotor system. It will allow scientists to build on this knowledge to create advances in different fields, including medicine, rehabilitation, neurological, degenerative, and physiological, toward ameliorating human health problems. The book will be of utmost interest to professors and lecturers, graduate students, rehabilitation engineers, neuroscientists, sensorimotor scientists, space biomedical researchers, surveillance experts, gait analysts, and biomedical engineers for amputation, prosthetics, spinal cord injuries, and other conditions. El Paso, TX, USA Las Cruces, NM, USA

Thompson Sarkodie-Gyan Huiying Yu

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge permission for the reproduction of illustrations, tables, and data from the following bodies and scientists: • Professor Jeffrey Hausdorff (Harvard University and Tel Aviv University): Fig. 1.1. • R.  Uhlmann: Lehrbuch der Anatomie des Bewegungsapparates. UTB fuer Wissenschaft, 1996: Figs. 1.24 and 1.25. • Professor Thomas Mergner (University of Freiburg): Figs. 1.27, 1.30, and 1.37. • Professor Koji Ito (Tokyo Institute of Technology): Fig. 1.35. • World Health Organization (WHO): Formula on Disability-adjusted Life Year (DALY). • Shinya Aoi (Kyoto University et al.): Figs. 4.18, 4.20, 4.22, and 4.23. • MuradAlaqtash (Laboratory for Human MotionAnalysis and Neurorehabilitation): Fig. 6.3. • MDPI publishing (Professors Atul Sharma et al.): Figs. 6.10 and 6.11 and corresponding texts to describe the figures. • Fundamentals of the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue: Figs. 7.1, and 7.2. • Professor Stuart Currie (NHS, Leeds University) et al.; Figs. 7.4–7.18 including corresponding reproduction of texts to describe magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). • Professor Gary Glover (Department of Radiology, Stanford University): Reproduction of the Overview of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). • Nuffield Council on Bioethics (Novel NeuroTechnologies: Intervening in the brain): Figs. 7.20, 7.21, 7.22, 7.23, and 7.25; including texts to describe the various functions of the brain intervention. • Elsevier publishing (Professor Jonathan R. Wolpaw et al.): Fig. 7.24 including corresponding texts to describe the functions of the BCI System. • American Public Transportation Association (2009), “Identifying suspicious behavior in mass transit.” APTA SS-SRM-RP-009-09 Approved October 15, 2009: Fig. 8.2, Table 8.1. ix

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• Professor Lotte et al.: Fig. 8.9; including texts to describe the principle of the tongue-computer interface. • Lab for Human Motion Analysis and Neurorehabilitation: Figs. 8.4, 8.5, 8.6a, 8.6b, 8.7, 8.8, 8.13, 8.14, and 8.15; including description of the principle of computational intelligence.

Contents

1

 he Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological T Foundations��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������     1 Introduction to the Human Locomotor System ��������������������������������������     1 Physical Aspects of the Human Locomotor System����������������������������     1 The Human Skeleton: Planes of Reference and Directional Terms��������������������������������������������������������������������������     4 Forces in the Musculoskeletal System ������������������������������������������������     7 Biomechanics of the Locomotor System ��������������������������������������������     8 Body Planes ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������     8 Joints����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������     9 Fibrous Joints ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    10 Cartilaginous Joints������������������������������������������������������������������������������    10 Synovial Joints ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    10 Movable Joints ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    11 Categories of Synovial Joints��������������������������������������������������������������    11 Planar Joints ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    12 Hinge Joint ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    13 Pivot Joint��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    14 Condyloid Joint������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    14 Saddle Joints����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    15 Ball-and-Socket Joints ������������������������������������������������������������������������    16 Mapping Between Upper and Lower Limb Joints ������������������������������    17 Dynamics of the Upper Extremity ������������������������������������������������������    17 Joints of the Elbow������������������������������������������������������������������������������    19 Wrist Joint��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    20 The Lower Extremity ������������������������������������������������������������������������������    22 Human Hip Joint����������������������������������������������������������������������������������    22 Surrounding Musculature��������������������������������������������������������������������    24 Knee Joint��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    25 Foot and Ankle������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    27 Ankle Joint (Talocrural Joint)��������������������������������������������������������������    27 xi

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Anatomy of the Talocrural Joint (Ankle Joint)������������������������������������    28 Anatomy of the Subtalar Joint (Tolocalcaneal Joint)��������������������������    29 Anatomy of the Midtarsal Joint ����������������������������������������������������������    29 Anatomy of the Tarsometatarsal (TMT) Joint Complex����������������������    29 Anatomy of the Metatarsophalangeal (MTP) Joints and Interphalangeal (IP) Joints������������������������������������������������������������    30 The Foot (Categories)��������������������������������������������������������������������������    30 Forefoot������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    30 Midfoot������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    31 Hindfoot ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    32 Muscles Controlling Foot Movements������������������������������������������������    33 Foot-Aided Tendons����������������������������������������������������������������������������    33 Primary Ligaments of the Foot������������������������������������������������������������    34 Muscle Physiology of the Human Locomotor System������������������������    34 Physiology of Muscle Activation and Electromyography ������������������    37 Contribution of Muscle to Motion Control������������������������������������������    38 Muscle as a Smart Material with Intrinsic Self-Stabilizing Properties ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    38 Cerebral Blood Flow in the Human Locomotor System���������������������    39 Fractal Dynamics in the Human Locomotor System��������������������������    40 Perceptual and Feedback: Somatosensory System in the Human Locomotor System ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������    42 Somatosensory System������������������������������������������������������������������������    42 Somatosensory Afferents Convey Information from the Skin Surface to Central Circuits������������������������������������������������������������������    43 Significance of the Somatosensory System ����������������������������������������    46 Information Acquisition Through Proprioception�������������������������������    49 Exteroception ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    50 Information Acquisition Through Exteroception and Interoception ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    51 Systems Analysis Approach in Human Locomotor System��������������������    53 The Vestibular System��������������������������������������������������������������������������    53 The Joint Angle Sense (Proprioception)����������������������������������������������    54 The Visual Orientation Cues����������������������������������������������������������������    55 The Somatosensory Plantar Pressure Receptors����������������������������������    55 Data Acquisition in Human Locomotor System����������������������������������    55 Data Acquisition: The Vestibular System��������������������������������������������    56 Data Acquisition: The Joint Angle Sensor ������������������������������������������    57 Data Acquisition: The Force/Torque Sensor����������������������������������������    58 Data Acquisition: The Psychophysical Evidence for Sensor Concept������������������������������������������������������������������������������    58 The Meta Level Concept����������������������������������������������������������������������    59 Postural Reflex Concept����������������������������������������������������������������������    59 Posture-Movement Problem����������������������������������������������������������������    60 The Nervous System (CNS, PNS) ����������������������������������������������������������    62

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The Brain (Cerebral Cortex)����������������������������������������������������������������    62 Spinal Cord and Nerves ����������������������������������������������������������������������    62 The Motor System of the Human Body��������������������������������������������������    64 Important Functions of the Cerebellum ����������������������������������������������    69 The Motor Cortex��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    70 Motor Aspects of the Human Locomotor System��������������������������������    72 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    73 2

Significance in the Understanding of the Human Locomotor System ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    77 Introduction����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    77 The Human Locomotor System ��������������������������������������������������������������    78 The Skeletal System��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    79 The Muscular System������������������������������������������������������������������������������    79 The Nervous System��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    82 The Cardiovascular System ��������������������������������������������������������������������    83 The Respiratory System��������������������������������������������������������������������������    83 The Digestive System������������������������������������������������������������������������������    84 Disabilities, Disorders, Impairments��������������������������������������������������������    84 Neuromuscular Disorders������������������������������������������������������������������������    84 Musculoskeletal Disorders����������������������������������������������������������������������    85 Carpal Tunnel Syndrome ������������������������������������������������������������������������    86 Tendinitis��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    86 Shoulder Tendonitis ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    88 Wrist Tendonotis��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    88 Biceps Tendonitis������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    89 Tibialis Posterior Tendinopathy ��������������������������������������������������������������    89 Quadriceps Tendonitis������������������������������������������������������������������������������    89 Sprain-Strain��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    90 Radial Tunnel Syndrome��������������������������������������������������������������������������    91 Degenerative Disc Disease����������������������������������������������������������������������    92 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    96

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Challenges and Concerns to Society: The Human Locomotor System ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������    99 Disability-Adjusted Life Year, DALY������������������������������������������������������   101 Stroke ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   102 Traumatic Brain Injury����������������������������������������������������������������������������   103 Spinal Cord Injuries ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������   104 Parkinson’s Disease ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������   105 Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis������������������������������������������������������������   105 Alzheimer’s Disease��������������������������������������������������������������������������������   106 Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)������������������������������������������������������������   106 Neurodegeneration ������������������������������������������������������������������������������   107 Lumbar Degenerative Disk Disease��������������������������������������������������������   107 Scoliosis ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   108

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Muscular Dystrophy��������������������������������������������������������������������������������   108 Low Back Pain ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   109 Myofascial Pain Syndrome����������������������������������������������������������������������   109 Military Action����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   110 Mission Essential Fitness (Military)��������������������������������������������������������   110 Physiological Functions in Human During Spaceflight��������������������������   111 Intervening in the Brain ��������������������������������������������������������������������������   112 Ethical Concerns and Challenges of New Technology Initiatives ����������   115 Stigmatization������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   116 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   117 4

 he Physical Determinants of Human Locomotor System����������������   123 T Description of the Gait Cycle According to Fig. 4.2 ������������������������������   124 Significance of Measuring Physiological/Biomechanical Quantities������   133 The Major Determinants of Human Gait ������������������������������������������������   134 The Human Pelvis��������������������������������������������������������������������������������   135 Ligamentous Pelvic Anatomy��������������������������������������������������������������   137 Constituent Mechanisms of Human Gait��������������������������������������������   137 Pelvic List (Lateral Tilt) (Pelvic Drop)������������������������������������������������   140 Knee Movement During Gait Cycle [1, 5]������������������������������������������   142 Muscle Activation in the Gait Cycle��������������������������������������������������������   143 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   149

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 easurement in Human Locomotor System��������������������������������������   153 M Measurement and Instrumentation����������������������������������������������������������   154 Systems Analysis Approach��������������������������������������������������������������������   158 Psychophysics and Its Significance ��������������������������������������������������������   159 Analysis of Different Types of Joints and Segments ������������������������������   159 The Acquisition of Biomechanics/Physiological Information����������������   159 3 D Determination of the Head and Neck������������������������������������   160 Determination of the Shoulder Joint��������������������������������������������������������   161 3 D Determination of the Elbow Joint ����������������������������������������   162 3 D Determination of the Wrist Joint������������������������������������������   163 3 D Determination of the Hip Joint����������������������������������������������   163 Lumbo-Pelvic Hip Complex��������������������������������������������������������������������   164 3 D Determination of the Knee Joint ������������������������������������������   166 3 D Determination of the Foot Joint��������������������������������������������   167 3 D Determination of the Ankle Joint������������������������������������������   167 3 D Determination of the Ground Reaction Forces (GRFs)��������   167 Regenerative Medicine Procedures����������������������������������������������������������   168 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   175

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 ensors and/or Transducers in Human Locomotor System��������������   179 S The Camera System (The Motion Capture System)��������������������������������   179 Inertial Motion Units (IMUs)������������������������������������������������������������������   181 Goniometer����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   183

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Electromyography������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   184 Strain Gauge��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   185 Fiber Optic Sensors (FOS)����������������������������������������������������������������������   186 Heart Rate Monitoring ����������������������������������������������������������������������������   186 Skin Conductivity������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   189 Biosensors������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   190 Wearable Biosensors��������������������������������������������������������������������������������   191 Emerging Technologies in Wearable Biosensors ������������������������������������   195 Biofluid Saliva: As a Chemical Sensor����������������������������������������������������   195 Biofluid Sweat: As a Non-invasive Sweat Glucose���������������������������������   195 Biofluid Tears: As a Chemical Sensor������������������������������������������������������   196 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   196 7

 echnology Initiatives in the Human Locomotor System������������������   199 T Review of the Nervous System����������������������������������������������������������������   199 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) ����������������������������������   203 Principle of the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)����������������������������   204 Understanding MRI: Basic MR Physics for Physicians [12]������������������   206 Origin of the MR Signal: Protons and ‘Little Bar Magnets’ [12]������������   208 Precession [12]����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   209 Longitudinal Magnetization [12] ������������������������������������������������������������   210 RF Pulses and Transverse Magnetization [12]����������������������������������������   212 T1 Relaxation and T1 Values [12] ����������������������������������������������������������   214 T2 and T2* Relaxation [12] ��������������������������������������������������������������������   215 Free Induction Decay [12] ����������������������������������������������������������������������   216 T1-Weighted Images [12]������������������������������������������������������������������������   217 T2-Weighted Images [12]������������������������������������������������������������������������   219 Factors Influencing SE Contrast and Weighting [12]������������������������������   221 Gradient Echo [12]����������������������������������������������������������������������������������   222 Differences Between SE and GRE [12]��������������������������������������������������   223 Image Construction [12]��������������������������������������������������������������������������   224 Localizing and Encoding MR Signals ������������������������������������������������   224 Slice-Selection Gradient����������������������������������������������������������������������   224 Phase-Encoding Gradient��������������������������������������������������������������������   226 Frequency-Encoding Gradient ������������������������������������������������������������   226 Image Acquisition Time����������������������������������������������������������������������   227 Turbo SE����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   227 Echo-Planar Imaging ��������������������������������������������������������������������������   227 3D Encoding����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   228 Magnetic Susceptibility ����������������������������������������������������������������������   228 Intravenous Contrast����������������������������������������������������������������������������   228 Exploiting Magnetic Susceptibility Using GRE Imaging [12]����������������   229 Other Factors That May Influence Signal Intensity [12] ������������������������   229 TI: The Inversion Recovery Sequence ������������������������������������������������   229

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Flow [12]��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   231 Finally, a Word on Safety��������������������������������������������������������������������   231 Exposure to Magnetic Fields ��������������������������������������������������������������   232 Intravenous Contrast Agents����������������������������������������������������������������   232 Pregnancy and Breastfeeding��������������������������������������������������������������   233 Overview of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging [8] ��������������������   233 Concept of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) [8]����������   234 Analysis Methods [8]������������������������������������������������������������������������������   236 Comparisons with Other Functional Imaging Modalities [8]������������������   236 Spatial Resolution [8]��������������������������������������������������������������������������   237 Temporal Resolution [8]����������������������������������������������������������������������   237 Strengths and Weaknesses of fMRI [8]����������������������������������������������������   238 Future of fMRI [8] ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������   238 Conclusions [8]����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   239 Intervention in the Brain: Current Understanding and Technology Initiatives��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   239 Noninvasive Brain Stimulation����������������������������������������������������������������   240 Basic Principles of Noninvasive Brain Stimulation ��������������������������������   240 Transcranial Brain Stimulation (TBS) ����������������������������������������������������   240 Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)����������������������������������������������   241 Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) ��������������������������   243 Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) ������������������������������������   243 Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation (TACS)����������������������������   244 Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS)����������������������������������������������������������������   245 The Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulation����������������������������������������������������   246 Sub-Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulation����������������������������������������������������   247 Globus Pallidus Deep Brain Stimulation ������������������������������������������������   247 Brain-Computer Interface System (BCIS)����������������������������������������������   248 Paradigm of the Brain-Computer Interface, BCI ������������������������������������   248 The Output Device ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������   252 Neural Stem Cell Therapy (NSCT)����������������������������������������������������������   252 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   254 8

 rtificial Intelligence in Human Locomotor System��������������������������   261 A Space Exploration������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   263 Application of Human Locomotor System in Surveillance ��������������������   265 Emerging Technologies����������������������������������������������������������������������������   270 Artificial Intelligence (AI) ����������������������������������������������������������������������   271 Intelligent Measurement and Instrumentation ����������������������������������������   271 Case Study I: Measurement Science in the Human Locomotor System ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������   272 Case Study II: Measurement Science in the Human Locomotor System (Conceptualized and Performed in the Laboratory for Human Motion Analysis and NeuroRehabilitation)����������������������������������������������������������   275 Biosensors������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   277

Contents

xvii

Tongue-Computer Interface ��������������������������������������������������������������������   278 Magnetoelastic Wireless Biosensor ��������������������������������������������������������   280 Artificial Neural Networks����������������������������������������������������������������������   280 Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs)������������������������������������������������   282 Computational Intelligence����������������������������������������������������������������������   283 Application of Computational Intelligence in Human Locomotor System������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   283 Notion of Neuromorphic Engineering ����������������������������������������������������   288 References������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   290 Index����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   297

Chapter 1

The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations

Introduction to the Human Locomotor System The human locomotor system constitutes many physical, perceptual, and motor aspects.

Physical Aspects of the Human Locomotor System The human locomotor system (also known as the musculoskeletal system) consists of the skeleton, skeletal muscles, ligaments, tendons, joints, cartilage, and other connective tissues. The locomotor system involves a human body system that provides the body with movement, stability, shape, and support. The system is subdivided into muscular (which consists of all types of muscles in the body, including tendons that attach the muscles to the bones) and skeletal (which are the ones that act on the body joints to produce movements). The human locomotor system involves the interaction of the muscles, sense organs, motor pattern generators, and the brain toward the production of coordinated movement both in diverse and complex environments. Coordinated movement is an adaptive human behavior driven by the intelligent sensory-motor functions toward balance, posture, and stability of the body. Hence, the human dynamic behavior in space is a very complex process because it involves many physical, perceptual, and motor aspects. Figure 1.1 depicts the physiological/biomechanical factors that affect the dynamics of locomotion. The physiological factors that affect the dynamics of the locomotor system include neural control, muscle function, and postural control; however, more subtle alterations in underlying physiology, including cardiovascular changes and mental health, may also influence the variability of locomotion [1]. © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 T. Sarkodie-Gyan, H. Yu, The Human Locomotor System, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32781-0_1

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1  The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations

Fig. 1.1  Simplified block diagram of the locomotor system

Volition

Central Nervous System

Muscles

Body Segments Limbs/Joints

Position (Movement/Gait)

Feedback Control System Sensors

Proprioception

Visual

Vestibular

Feedback Sensors

Fig. 1.2  Simplified conceptual scheme of the human locomotor system

Furthermore, Fig. 1.2 illustrates a simplified conceptual scheme of the human locomotor system. From this conceptual scheme of the human locomotor system, as illustrated in Fig. 1.2, a linkage system (body segments), actuators (muscles), feedback sensors (consisting of proprioception, visual, and vestibular systems), and the central nervous system (CNS) are depicted.

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The scheme illustrates a feedback control system in which a position or set point is generated within the central nervous system (CNS). This set point may also be understood as the posture/balance of the human body. This set point is then compared with the actual position of the limb/posture, and the CNS will send a neural signal to the muscles. The muscles exert forces on the bones of the skeletal system, which will start moving if it is not constrained by the environment. Notably, the interaction between the body and environment imposes some constraints on the redundant degree of freedom in the total dynamical system. The movements are detected by the sensors, which are all over the body, in the muscles, joints, and skin as well as the visual and vestibular sensory systems. The sensory receptors in the muscles, joints, and skin provide the brain with essential information about the position and motion of the body and limbs. Using these sensory signals, the actual position of the skeletal system can be reconstructed. The skeletal system of the musculoskeletal system is illustrated in Fig. 1.3.

Fig. 1.3  Illustration of the skeletal system

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The musculoskeletal system is made up of bones, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, and muscles, which form a framework for the body. Tendons, ligaments, and fibrous tissue bind the structures together to create stability, with ligaments connecting bone to bone and tendons connecting muscle to bone. The skeleton is built of bone tissue. Joints, or articulations, are the intersections between bones. Ligaments connect bones at the articulations, thus reinforcing the joints. The skeleton consists of approximately 20% of the total body weight. The skeletal system is generally broken down into axial and appendicular skeletons. Bone tissue performs many functions, including support, attachment sites, leverage, protection, storage, and blood cell formation. A ligament is a short band of tough fibrous connective tissue that binds bone to bone and consists of collagen, elastin, and reticulin fibers. The ligament usually provides support in one direction and often blends with the capsule of the joint. Ligaments can be capsular, extracapsular, or intra-articular. Capsular ligaments are simply thickenings in the wall of the capsule, much like the glenohumeral ligaments in front of the shoulder capsule. Extracapsular ligaments lie outside the joint itself. The collateral ligaments found in numerous joints are extracapsular (for example, fibular collateral ligament of the knee). Finally, intra-articular ligaments, such as the cruciate ligaments of the knee and the capitate ligaments in the hip, are located inside a joint.

 he Human Skeleton: Planes of Reference T and Directional Terms Under the assumption that the human skeleton (the bones of the body) is in standard anatomical position, that is, standing erect, looking forward, with the feet close and parallel to each other, the arms at the sides, and the palms facing forward (Figs. 1.4 and 1.5), the main planes of reference and directional terms that are essential for the description of the human skeleton that divide the body into sections include the following: (i) The sagittal (or midsagittal) plane separates the right half from the left half of the body. (ii) The coronal plane is perpendicular to the sagittal and separates the anterior half from the posterior half of the body. (iii) The transverse plane is perpendicular to the sagittal and coronal planes, and it may be located at different heights. As depicted in Figs. 1.4 and 1.5, there are three perpendicular anatomical planes in the human body, which are referred to as the cardinal planes. The sagittal plane is formed by the SI (Superior/Inferior) and AP (Anterior/Posterior) axes, the frontal (or coronal) plane is formed by the SI and ML (Medial Lateral) axes, and the

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Fig. 1.4  Planes of reference and directional terms of the human skeleton

transverse plane is formed by the AP and ML axes (Figs. 1.4 and 1.5). Therefore, a three-­ dimensional analysis is necessary for a complete representation of human motion. From Figs. 1.4 and 1.5, the main directions for parts of the body are superior, inferior, anterior, posterior, medial, and lateral, whereas the terms proximal and distal are more appropriate for the limbs [3]. Superior is toward the head, inferior toward the feet, anterior toward the front of the body, posterior toward the back of the body, medial toward the sagittal plane, and lateral away from the sagittal plane. For the limbs, proximal lies toward the trunk of the body, and distal lies away from the trunk. Terms that are often used for the hands and feet include palmar, which is the palm side of the hand; plantar, which is the sole side of the foot; and dorsal, that is, the top side of the foot or the back side of the hand, Fig. 1.6. Note that when the terms right and left are used,

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Fig. 1.5  The cardinal planes as a reference frame for the three-dimensional representation of the human body

Superior

Sagital

Frontal

Posterior

Medial Transverse

Anterior

Lateral

Inferior

they refer to the sides of the individual being studied and not to the sides of the observer [3]. A three-dimensional analysis is necessary for a complete representation of human motion. The motion of any bone can be referenced with respect to either a

Introduction to the Human Locomotor System Fig. 1.6  Directional terms for the upper and lower limbs

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proximal

dorsal

proximal

distal

palmar dorsal

distal

plantar

local or global coordinate system. For example, the motion of the tibia can be described by how it moves with respect to the femur (local coordinate system) or how it moves with respect to the room (global coordinate system). Local coordinate systems are useful for understanding joint function and assessing range of motion, while global coordinate systems are useful when functional activities are considered [3].

Forces in the Musculoskeletal System The musculoskeletal system is responsible for generating forces that move the human body in space as well as preventing unwanted motions. Understanding the mechanics and patho-mechanics of human motion requires an ability to study the forces and moments applied to, and generated by, the body or a particular body segment. Some of the more common force generators with respect to the musculoskeletal system include muscles/tendons, ligaments, friction, ground reaction, and weight. The distinction between the mass and the weight of a body is that the amount of matter composing that object constitutes the mass, whereas the weight is the force acting on that object due to gravity and is the product of its mass and the acceleration due to gravity. So while the mass of an object is the same on Earth as it is on the

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moon, its weight on the moon is less since the acceleration due to gravity is lower on the moon.

Biomechanics of the Locomotor System Biomechanics allows the application of the laws of mechanics to describe the locomotor system of the human body. This means that biomechanics establishes the interrelations of the skeleton, muscles, and joints.

Body Planes It is of utmost significance to clearly depict the specific body planes of reference (anatomic position), because they are often used in the description of the structural position and the directions of the functional movement. In the standard position of reference (anatomic position), the body faces forward, the hands are at the sides of the body, the palms face forward, and the feet point straight ahead. The body planes are derived from dimensions in space and are oriented at right angles to one another [3]. The sagittal plane is vertical and extends from the anterior to the posterior (or from the front to the back). Its name is derived from the direction of the human sagittal suture in the cranium. The median sagittal plane (also called the midsagittal plane) divides the body into right and left halves, Fig. 1.7a. The coronal plane is vertical and extends from side to side. Its name is derived from the orientation of the human coronal suture of the cranium. It may also be referred to as the frontal plane, and it divides the body into anterior and posterior components, Fig. 1.7b. The transverse plane is a horizontal plane and divides a structure into upper and lower components, Fig. 1.7c. In the midsagittal plane, movements of flexion and extension take place in the sagittal plane. In the coronal plane, movements of abduction and adduction (lateral flexion) take place in the coronal plane. In the transverse plane, movements of medial and lateral rotation take place in the transverse plane. The human skeleton is a system of bones joined together to form segments or links. These links are movable and provide for the attachment of muscles, ligaments, and tendons to produce movement. Whereas the bones form the levers, the ligaments that surround the joints establish hinges, and the muscles provide the forces for moving the levers about the joints. An articulation constitutes the junction of two or more bones and can be classified according to function, position, structure, and the degrees of freedom for movement they allow.

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Fig. 1.7 (a) Midsagittal plane (b) Coronal plane (c) Transverse plane

Joints Joints are locations at which bones of the skeleton connect with one another. A joint is also called an articulation. The majority of joints are structured in such a way that they allow movement. In fact, not all joints allow movement [11]. Of all those joints that do allow movement, the extent and direction of the movements they allow also vary. Joints may be classified as either structural or functional. Whereas the structural classification of joints depends on the manner in which the bones connect to each other, their functional classification depends on the nature of the movement the joints allow. There is significant overlap between the two types of classifications because function depends largely on the structure. Furthermore, the structural classification of joints is based on the type of tissue that binds the bones to each other at the joint. Hence, there are three types of joints in the structural classification; they include the fibrous, cartilaginous, and synovial joints.

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Fibrous Joints Fibrous joints are joints in which the bones are held together by fibrous connective tissue. There is no cavity, or space, present between the bones, and so most fibrous joints do not move at all or are only capable of minor movements. There are three types of fibrous joints: sutures, syndesmoses, and gomphoses. Sutures are found only in the skull and possess short fibers of connective tissue that hold the skull bones tightly in place. Syndesmoses are joints in which the bones are connected by a band of connective tissue, allowing for more movement than in a suture. An example of a syndesmosis is the joint of the tibia and fibula in the ankle. The amount of movement in these types of joints is determined by the length of the connective tissue fibers. Gomphoses occur between teeth and their sockets; the term refers to the way the tooth fits into the socket like a peg. The tooth is connected to the socket by a connective tissue referred to as the periodontal ligament.

Cartilaginous Joints Cartilaginous joints are joints in which bones are connected by cartilage. There are two types of cartilaginous joints: the synchondroses and the symphyses. Whereas the bones are joined by hyaline cartilage in a synchondrosis, hyaline cartilage covers the end of the bone, but the connection between bones occurs through fibrocartilage in symphyses. Synchondroses are found in the epiphyseal plates of growing bones in children. Symphyses are found at the joints between vertebrae. Either type of cartilaginous joint allows for very little movement.

Synovial Joints Synovial joints are the only joints that have a space between the adjoining bones and are characterized by a fluid-filled space. This space is referred to as the synovial (or joint) cavity and is filled with synovial fluid, called a synovial cavity, between the bones of the joints. A typical synovial joint is illustrated in Fig. 1.8. Synovial fluid lubricates the joint, reducing friction between the bones and allowing for greater movement. The ends of the bones are covered with articular cartilage, a hyaline cartilage, and the entire joint is surrounded by an articular capsule composed of connective tissue that allows movement of the joint while resisting dislocation. Articular capsules may also possess ligaments that hold the bones together. Synovial joints are capable of the greatest movement of the three structural joint types; however, the more mobile a joint, the weaker the joint. Knees, elbows, and shoulders are examples of synovial joints.

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Fig. 1.8  The synovial membrane, articular capsule, joint cavity with synovial fluid, articular cartilage, and bone ends are the main components of a typical synovial joint

Movable Joints Movable joints can be classified according to the type of movement they allow [11]. There are six classes of movable joints. These six classes of movable joints include: pivot, hinge, saddle, plane, condyloid, and ball-and-socket joints. Figure 1.9 illustrates an example of each class as well as the type of movement it allows.

Categories of Synovial Joints Synovial joints are classified into six different categories on the basis of the shape and structure of the joint. The shape of the joint affects the type of movement permitted by the joint, Fig. 1.9. These joints can be described as planar, hinge, pivot, condyloid, saddle, or ball-and-socket joints.

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1  The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations

Fig. 1.9  Diagram illustrating the six different classes of movable joints in the human body. Planar, hinge, pivot, condyloid, saddle, and ball-and-socket are all types of synovial joints

Planar Joints Planar joints have bones with articulating surfaces that are flat or have slightly curved faces. These joints allow two bones to exhibit gliding movements over one another, and so the joints are sometimes referred to as gliding joints. The joints between the tarsals in the ankles and between the carpals in the wrists are mainly gliding joints. In the wrist, this type of joint allows the hand to bend upward at the

Introduction to the Human Locomotor System

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wrist and also to wave from side to side while the lower arm is held steady. Planar joints are found in the carpal bones in the hand and the tarsal bones of the foot, as well as between vertebrae, Fig. 1.10. The range of motion is limited in these joints and does not involve rotation.

Hinge Joint A hinge joint allows back-and-forth movement like the hinge of a door. The slightly rounded end of one bone fits into the slightly hollow end of the other bone. In this way, one bone moves while the other remains stationary, like the hinge of a door. An example of a hinge joint is the elbow. This joint allows the arm to bend back and forth. The knee is sometimes classified as a modified hinge joint, Fig. 1.11.

Fig. 1.10  Examples of planar joints include the joints of the carpal bones in the wrist

Fig. 1.11  The elbow joint, where the radius articulates with the humerus, is an example of a hinge joint

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Pivot Joint A pivot joint allows one bone to rotate around another. It consists of the rounded end of one bone fitting into a ring formed by the other bone. This structure allows rotational movement as the rounded bone moves around its own axis. An example of a pivot joint is the joint between the first two vertebrae in the spine. This joint allows the head to rotate from left to right and back again, Fig. 1.12.

Condyloid Joint A condyloid joint is one in which an oval-shaped head on one bone moves in an elliptical cavity in another bone, thereby allowing movement in all directions except rotation around an axis, Fig. 1.13. This type of joint is also sometimes called an ellipsoidal joint. It allows angular movement along two axes, as seen in the joints of the wrist and fingers, which can move both side to side and up and down.

Fig. 1.12  An example of a pivot joint is in the neck that allows the head to move back and forth

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Fig. 1.13  Examples of condyloid joints are the metacarpophalangeal joints in the finger

Saddle Joints Saddle joints are so named because the ends of each bone resemble a saddle, with concave and convex portions that fit together. Saddle joints allow two different types of movement. They allow angular movements similar to condyloid joints but with a greater range of motion. An example of a saddle joint is the thumb joint, which can move back and forth and up and down but more freely than the wrist or fingers, Fig. 1.14.

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Fig. 1.14  Examples of saddle joints are the carpometacarpal joints in the thumb Fig. 1.15  An example of a ball-and socket joint is the shoulder joint

Ball-and-Socket Joints Ball-and-socket joints possess a rounded, ball-like end of one bone fitting into a cup-like socket of another bone. This allows the greatest range of movement of any movable joint in all directions. It allows forward and backward as well as upward and downward motions. It also allows rotation in a circle. The hip and shoulder are the only two ball-and-socket joints in the human body, Fig. 1.15.

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Mapping Between Upper and Lower Limb Joints Human locomotion is a complex process that shows some inherent synergies and coordination, also called inter-joint coordination, between the upper and lower limbs. Coordinated, stable, and adaptive human locomotor movement is dependent upon the integrated coordination between the lower and upper limbs, as well as the trunk. There emerges a coupled inter-limb control of diagonally opposite limbs moving synchronously during a walking task. This coupled inter-limb control could represent an evolutionary remnant of quadrupedal locomotion. Movements of the upper limbs are coordinated with those of the hindlimbs through propriospinal pathways that also exist in humans, as in quadrupeds, and connect cervical and lumbar spinal circuits, resulting in alternating rhythmic activation of the corresponding central pattern generators (CPGs). Corticospinal connections also contribute to arm muscle activity during adult upright walking. Research reports suggest that arm movements coordinated with leg movements form an integral part of human bipedal locomotion and help reducing overall energy expenditure [6, 20]. Furthermore, there are some important physiological differences in the control of the inter-limb coordination between quadrupeds and humans, presumably in relation to the different control of balance and the different use of the forelimbs. Walking is the most common daily functional activity among people. When people walk, the swinging motion of their arms along with bipedal action is a natural human behavior whereby one leg must support the body in stance while the other limb moves through the swing phase to facilitate forward progression [6, 20]. Positional and rotational movements of the hand and leg joints occur in a coordinated fashion between the upper and lower body segments.

Dynamics of the Upper Extremity The upper limb consists of the upper arm, forearm, and hand and is connected to the axial skeleton by the shoulder girdle. The shoulder complex has the greatest mobility of all joints in the human body, whereby each articulation contributes to the movement of the arm through coordinated joint actions [7, 8]. There occurs free motion and coordinated actions between all four articulation joints of the shoulder complex, namely the scapulothoracic, sternoclavicular, acromioclavicular (AC), and glenohumeral joints [9]. The sternoclavicular joint serves as the only point of skeletal attachment of the upper extremity to the trunk. The clavicle is connected to the scapula at its distal end via the acromioclavicular joint. The scapula interfaces with the thorax via the scapulothoracic joint. In fact, this articulation just connects bone to bone. However, it is a physiological joint that

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1  The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations

a

b Acromion Cervical vertebrae CI-VII

Superior transverse scapular ligament

Fibrous membrane of joint capsule Rib I Clavicle

Synovial membrane

Acromion

Coracoid process

Coracoid process

Sternoclvicular joint

Greater tubercle

Glenoid cavity Manubrium of sternum Humerus Suprascapular notch

Transverse humeral ligament

Glenoid labrum

Redundant synovial membrane in adduction Tendon of long head of biceps brachii

Fig. 1.16  Illustration of the anterior view of the bony framework of the shoulder

contains neurovascular, muscular, and bursal structures that allow for smooth motion of the scapula on the thorax. Motions at the glenohumeral joint (also called the shoulder joint) are represented by the movements of the arm. This is a synovial ball-and-socket joint that offers the greatest range of motion and movement potential of any joint in the body. Figure 1.16 illustrates the anterior view of the bony framework of the shoulder. The shoulder girdle is formed by the clavicle and scapula. The scapula forms a joint with the arm at the humerus (glenohumeral joint), and the proximal point of the clavicle forms a joint with the thorax at the sternum (sternoclavicular joint), while the distal point of the clavicle articulates with the acromion of the scapula, forming the acromioclavicular joint. The shape of the glenohumeral joint combined with its loose articulation gives the shoulder a high range of motion and makes it the most mobile of all the joints in the human body [7, 8]. The humerus is the only bone that supports the upper arm and articulates with the bones of the forearm—the ulna and the radius—at the elbow joint. The elbow joint consists of three articulations: the humeroradial joint, the humeroulnar joint, and the radioulnar joint. The principal muscles responsible for joints actions at the shoulder joint include the following: Abduction Deltoid Supraspinatus Serratus anterior and trapezius assist abduction past the horizontal plane

Adduction Pectoralis major Latissimus dorsi (aided by terres major and subscapularis)

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Extension Lasissimus dorsi Teres major Posterior deltoid fibers

Flexion Pectoralis major Anterior fibers of deltoid Coracobrachialis biceps brachii (long head)

Lateral rotation Infraspinatus Teres minor (aided by posterior fibers of deltoid)

Medial rotation Subscapularis Teres major Pectoralis major Lattismus dorsi (aided by anterior fibers of deltoid)

Joints of the Elbow The elbow is a critical element for a functional upper extremity (the upper extremity consists of a mechanically linked system between the shoulder, elbow, wrist, and hand). It is a stable joint, with structural integrity, good ligamentous support, and good muscular support [11]. It has three joints allowing motion between the three bones of the arm and forearm (humerus, radius, and ulna). Movement between the forearm and the arm takes place at the ulnohumeral and radiohumeral articulations, and movements between the radius and the ulna take place at the radioulnar articulations. The primary functions of the elbow are to position the hand in space, act as a fulcrum for the forearm, and allow for powerful grasping and fine motions of the hand and wrist. The ulnohumeral joint is the articulation between the ulna and the humerus and is the major contributing joint to flexion and extension of the forearm, Fig. 1.17. The radiohumeral joint is the other joint that participates in flexion and extension of the forearm. The radioulnar joint is the articulation that establishes movement between the radius and the ulna in pronation and supination [7, 8, 11]. There are actually two radioulnar articulations: the superior in the elbow joint region and the inferior near the wrist, respectively. The principal muscles responsible for joints actions at the elbow joint include: Extension Triceps (aided anconeus)

Flexion Brachialis Biceps brachii (especially when forearm is supinated) Aided by brachioradialis and other muscles in flexor forearm compartment

The principal muscles responsible for joints actions at the radioulnar joint include:

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Fig. 1.17 (a) View of right upper extremity and (b) the articulations of the elbow joint Supination Supinator Biceps aids when there is resistance

Pronation Pronator quadratus Pronator teres aids when there is resistance

Wrist Joint The human wrist joint, which is also called the radiocarpal joint (is also a diarthrodial joint), is a ball-and-socket joint that allows for flexion, extension, abduction, and adduction movements, Fig. 1.18. It is a condyloid synovial joint of the distal upper limb that connects and serves as a transition point between the forearm and hand. The wrist joint consists of eight carpal bones, which are interposed between the forearm (radius and ulna) and the five metacarpal bones [9]. Furthermore, the wrist consists of two rows of carpal bones, namely the proximal carpal row (PCR) that includes the three carpals that participate in wrist joint function: the scaphoid, lunate, and triquetrum, including the pisiform bone that sits on the medial side of the hand to serve as the site of muscular attachment. The distal carpal row (DCR) includes four carpals: the trapezium that interfaces with the thumb at the saddle joint, the trapezoid, the capitate, and the hamate [9]. The articulation between the two rows of carpals is called the midcarpal joint, and the articulation between a pair of carpal bones is referred to as an inter-­ carpal joint.

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Fig. 1.18  Bones of the wrist from dorsal

The soft tissue structures surrounding the carpal bones include the tendons that cross the carpus (the carpus is divided into the proximal and the distal rows) or attach to it, the ligamentous structures that connect the carpal bones to each other, and the bony elements of the hand and forearm. The principal muscles responsible for joints actions at the wrist joint include the following: Abduction Flexor carpi radialis Extensior carpi radialis ulnaris Longus and brevis

Adduction Flexor carpi ulnaris Extensor carpi

Extension Extensor carpi radialis brevis and longus Extensor carpi ulnaris (Aided by extensor digitorum)

Flexion Flexor carpi radialis Flexor carpi ulnaris (aided by flexors of the fingers)

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The principal muscles responsible for the movement of the fingers include: Abduction Dorsal

Adduction Palmar interossei

Extension Extensor digitorum (Aided by lumbricalis and interossei)

Flexion Flexor digitorum superficialis and profundus. Lumbricals (the Lumbricals act to flex the metacarpo-phalangeal joint and extend the interphalangeal joints.

The principal muscles responsible for the movement of the thumb include the following: Abduction Adductor pollicis longus and brevis Extension Extensor pollicis longus and brevis Opposition Opponens pollicis.

Adduction Adductor pollicis Flexion Flexor pollicis longus and brevis.

The Lower Extremity Human Hip Joint The hip joint, also referred to as the acetabulofemoral joint, is the joint between the head of the femur and the acetabulum of the pelvis. It has three degrees of freedom and is a ball-and-socket joint consisting of the articulation between the acetabulum on the pelvis and the head of the femur. It is a diarthroidal joint formed at the interface of the proximal head of the femur and the acetabulum, or socket, of the pelvis [10]. The hip joint, Fig.  1.19, connects the upper and lower halves of the body. Its primary function is to support the weight of the body in both static (e.g., standing) and dynamic (e.g., walking or running) postures. Articulation at the hip joint facilitates a variety of movement patterns, including flexion and extension, abduction and adduction, medial and lateral rotation, and circumduction [10]. The external rotation of the hip accompanies the forward pelvis, while the internal rotation accompanies the backward pelvic side.

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Acetabular labrum Acetabulum Head of femur Epiphyseal line Greater trochanter

Neck of femur Femoral neck axis

Shaft of femur

Anatomical axis of femur

Fig. 1.19  Bony anatomy of the hip

The hip is a ball-and-socket joint and consists of the four principle features of a synovial or diarthrodial joint, namely: • • • •

A joint cavity Joint surfaces that are covered with articular cartilage A synovial membrane that produces synovial fluid A ligamentous capsule [3]

The femur is the longest bone in the body, extending from the hip joint proximally to the knee joint distally. The rounded head of the femur interfaces with the acetabulum, forming the ball-and-socket connection that facilitates a large rotational range of motion in healthy hips. Distal to the femoral head, the femoral neck extends infero-laterally and bridges the head to the femoral diaphysis (i.e., shaft). Bony outcroppings in the superior portion of the femoral shaft, known as the greater and lesser trochanters, are the attachment sites of tendons/muscles and ligaments, which are important for stabilization, rotation, and abduction/adduction of the hip. Distally, the femur ends in rounded condyles that interface with the tibia at the knee joint. The acetabular labrum is a fibrocartilaginous structure that spans the length of the acetabular rim. At the inferior gap of the horseshoe shaped acetabulum (i.e., at the acetabular notch), the labrum becomes contiguous with the transverse acetabular ligament. The labrum can increase the surface area of the acetabulum by up to 27% and is thought to assist with load distribution and stabilization of the hip joint [10, 11, 13].

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Attached to the rim of the acetabulum is the fibrocartilaginous labrum. It plays a role in normal joint development and in the distribution of forces around the joint. It has also been suggested that it plays a role in restricting the movement of synovial fluid to the peripheral compartment of the hip, thus helping exert a negative pressure effect within the hip joint. The labrum runs around the circumference of the acetabulum, terminating inferiorly where the transverse acetabular ligament crosses the inferior aspect of the acetabular fossa. It attaches to the bony rim of the acetabulum and is quite separate from the insertion of the capsule. The labrum receives a vascular supply from the obturator and the superior and inferior gluteal arteries. These arteries ascend in the reflected synovial layer on the capsule and enter the peripheral aspect of the labrum. The importance of this feature is that the femoral shaft is laterally displaced from the pelvis, thus facilitating freedom for joint motion. The head of the femur is attached to the femoral shaft by the femoral neck, which varies in length depending on body size. The femoral head and acetabulum are each covered with hyaline cartilage that, assisted by intra-articular synovial fluid, facilitates low-friction rotational movement of the hip joint.

Surrounding Musculature The movement of the hip joint is governed by muscles. Muscles controlling hip motion can be grouped into the gluteal (superficial and deep) region and the anterior, posterior, and medial compartments of the thigh. Superficial gluteal muscles, including the gluteus maximus, gluteus minimus, gluteus medius, and tensor fascia latae serve to stabilize the hip and produce extension, medial rotation, lateral rotation, and abduction of the femur. Muscles deep in the gluteal region (i.e., deep hip rotator muscles) are the piriformis, superior gemellus, obturator internus, inferior gemellus, and quadratus femoris. These muscles originate at different points on the pelvis but share attachments at the greater trochanter, thereby producing lateral rotation of the hip [10–12]. In the anterior compartment of the thigh, the iliopsoas (iliacus and psoas major), sartorius, and quadriceps (rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, and vastus intermedius) serve as the major flexors of the hip. Muscles of the medial thigh compartment are primarily hip adductors and include the pectineus, adductor longus, adductor magnus, adductor brevis, gracilis, and obturator externus. Finally, hamstring muscles, including semitendinosus, semimembranosus, and biceps femoris (long and short heads), make up the posterior thigh and are the major extensors of the hip [12, 13]. Contributions from these muscles not only produce rotational movements but also level and stabilize the pelvis during ambulation. The rectus femoris and hamstring muscles are biarticular, which means that they span the hip as well as the knee, and make important contributions to the rotation and stabilization of each joint.

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Fig. 1.20  The knee joint anatomy of the human with visible cruciate ligaments

Knee Joint The knee joint is a hinge-type synovial joint that mainly allows for flexion and extension, including a small degree of medial and lateral rotation, Fig. 1.20. It consists of tibiofemoral and patellofemoral articulations [13]. The tibiofemoral joint is the articulation between the two longest and strongest bones in the body (the femur and the tibia). It is the weight-bearing component of the knee joint. And the patellofemoral joint consists of the articulation of the patella with the trochlear groove on the femur. The knee supports the weight of the body and transmits forces from the ground while allowing a great deal of movement between the femur and the tibia. It allows locomotion with minimum energy requirements from the muscles, provides stability during the activities of daily life, and also accommodates different terrains and/ or environments [12, 13]. Ligaments are fibrous bands of tissue that connect bone to bone and provide support to joints. The knee is reinforced by two collateral ligaments, one on the medial side and another on the lateral side, as well as two stronger ligaments (the cruciate ligaments) that prevent excessive anterior, posterior, varus, and valgus displacement of the tibia in relation to the femur [14]. The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) provides the main stabilization for the knee and enables smooth and stable flexion and rotation of the knee, as well as anterior movement of the tibia relative to the femur.

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The ACL is considered the main stabilizer of the knee, contributing to about 85% of the knee stabilization and enabling smooth and stable flexion and rotation of the knee. The posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) is located inside the knee, just behind the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). It connects your upper leg to your lower leg. It is one of several ligaments that connect the femur (thighbone) to the tibia (shinbone). It offers the primary restraint to posterior movement of the tibia on the femur. The ACL primarily resists anterior and rotational displacement of the tibia relative to the femur, while the PCL prevents posterior displacement. Both the cruciate ligaments stabilize, limit rotation, and cause sliding of the condyles over the tibia in flexion. They both also offer some stabilization against varus and valgus forces. In a standing posture, with the tibial shaft vertical, the femur is aligned with the tibia and tends to slide posteriorly. The patellofemoral joint consists of the articulation of the patella with the trochlear groove on the femur. The patella is a triangular sesamoid bone encased by the tendons of the quadriceps femoris. The primary role of the patella is to increase the mechanical advantage of the quadriceps femoris [15–17]. The patella is connected to the tibial tuberosity via the strong patellar tendon [16]. It is connected to the femur and tibia by small patellofemoral and patellotibial ligaments that are actually thickenings in the extensor retinaculum surrounding the joint. The lateral meniscus (external semilunar fibrocartilage) is a fibrocartilaginous band that spans the lateral side of the interior of the knee joint. It is one of two menisci of the knee, the other being the medial meniscus. It is nearly circular and covers a larger portion of the articular surface than the medial. The medial meniscus is a fibrocartilage semicircular band that spans the knee joint medially and is located between the medial condyle of the femur and the medial condyle of the tibia. It is also referred to as the internal semilunar fibrocartilage [16, 17]. The menisci are important in the knee joint. The menisci enhance stability in the joint by deepening the contact surface on the tibia. They participate in shock absorption by transmitting half of the weight-bearing load in full extension and a significant portion of the load in flexion. In flexion, the lateral meniscus carries the greater portion of the load. By absorbing some of the load, the menisci protect the underlying articular cartilage and subchondral bone. The menisci transmit the load across the surface of the joint, reducing the load per unit area on the tibiofemoral contact sites. The lateral collateral ligament (LCL) is a thin band of tissue running along the outside of the knee. It connects the thighbone (femur) to the fibula, which is the small bone of the lower leg that runs down the side of the knee and connects to the ankle. The medial collateral ligament (MCL) is a band of tissue that runs along the inner edge of your knee. It helps to connect your shin and thigh bones to keep your knee stable and working properly when you move.

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Articular cartilage is the smooth, white tissue that covers the ends of bones where they come together to form joints. Healthy cartilage in our joints makes it easier to move [15–17]. It allows the bones to glide over each other with very little friction. Articular cartilage can be damaged by injury or normal wear and tear.

Foot and Ankle The foot and ankle constitute a complex anatomical structure that comprises 28 bones, 33 joints, 112 ligaments, and 13 extrinsic and 21 intrinsic muscles acting on the segments. All of the joints must interact harmoniously and in combination to achieve a smooth motion [11, 13]. The ankle joint (or the talocrural joint), as shown in Fig. 1.21, is a synovial hinge joint that consists of the articulation of three bones: the tibia, the fibula (bones of the lower leg), and the talus (bone of the foot). The articulations occur between the talus and the tibia, and the talus and the fibula. The tibia and fibula form a deep socket, a concave surface, for the trochlea of the talus, creating a mortise [13, 15].

Ankle Joint (Talocrural Joint) The ankle complex consists of three articulations: (1) the talocrural joint, (2) the subtalar joint, and (3) the distal tibiofibular syndesmosis. These three joints function in concert to allow coordinated movement of the hind foot.

Fig. 1.21  Figure of the ankle joint anatomy

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With reference to the feet, each big toe has two joints: (1) the metatarsophalangeal joint at the base of the toe and (2) the interphalangeal joint just above it. The other four toes have three joints each: (1) the metatarsophalangeal joint at the base of the toe, (2) the proximal interphalangeal joint in the middle of the toe, and (3) the distal phalangeal joint closest to the tip of the toe [14, 15].

Anatomy of the Talocrural Joint (Ankle Joint) The talocrural joint (the ankle joint) is formed by the articulation of the dome of the talus, the medial malleolus, the tibial plafond (the distal and inferior aspects of the tibia are also known as the plafond), and the lateral malleolus [14, 15]. The distal and inferior aspect of the tibia is connected to the fibula via tibiofibular ligaments, forming a strong mortise that articulates with the talar dome distally. It is a hinge joint and allows for dorsiflexion and plantarflexion movements in the sagittal plane. When the ankle complex is fully loaded, the articular surfaces are the primary stabilizers against excessive talar rotation and translation; however, the contribution of the ligaments to talocrural joint stability is crucial. The talocrural joint receives ligamentous support from a joint capsule and several ligaments, including the anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL), posterior talofibular ligament (PTFL), calcaneofibular ligament (CFL), and deltoid ligament. The ATFL, PTFL, and CFL support the lateral aspect of the ankle, while the deltoid ligament provides medial support [14, 15]. The ATFL lies on the dorsolateral aspect of the foot and courses from the lateral malleolus anteriorly and medially toward the talus at an angle of approximately 45° from the frontal plane. The ATFL is an average of 7.2 mm wide and 24.8 mm long. In vitro kinematic studies have shown that the ATFL prevents anterior displacement of the talus from the mortise and excessive inversion and internal rotation of the talus on the tibia. The strain in the ATFL increases as the ankle moves from dorsiflexion into plantar flexion. The ATFL demonstrates lower maximal load and energy to failure values under tensile stress as compared with the PTFL, CFL, anterior inferior tibiofibular ligament, and deltoid ligament. This may explain why the ATFL is the most frequently injured of the lateral ligaments [15]. The CFL courses from the lateral malleolus posteriorly and inferiorly to the lateral aspect of the calcaneus at a mean angle of 133° from the long axis of the fibula. The CFL restricts excessive supination of both the talocrural and subtalar joints. In fact, the CFL restricts excessive inversion and internal rotation of the rear foot and is most taut when the ankle is dorsiflexed. The CFL is the second most-often injured of the lateral talocrural ligaments [14]. The PTFL runs from the lateral malleolus posteriorly to the posterolateral aspect of the talus. The PTFL has broad insertions on both the talus and fibula and provides restraint to both inversion and internal rotation of the loaded talocrural joint. It is the least commonly sprained of the lateral ankle ligaments.

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Anatomy of the Subtalar Joint (Tolocalcaneal Joint) The subtalar joint (also known as the talocalcaneal joint) is formed by the articulations between the talus and the calcaneus, and, like the talocrural joint, it converts torque between the lower leg (internal and external rotation) and the foot (pronation and supination). The subtalar joint allows the motions of pronation and supination and consists of an intricate structure with two separate joint cavities [14, 15]. The posterior subtalar joint is formed between the inferior posterior facet of the talus and the superior posterior facet of the calcaneus. The anterior subtalar, or talocalcaneonavicular joint, is formed from the head of the talus, the anterior-superior facets, the sustentaculum tali of the calcaneus, and the concave proximal surface of the tarsal navicular. This articulation is similar to a ball-and-socket joint, with the talar head being the ball and the anterior calcaneal and proximal navicular surfaces forming the socket in conjunction with the spring ligament. The anterior and posterior subtalar joints have separate ligamentous joint capsules and are separated from each other by the sinus tarsi and canalis tarsi. The anterior joint lies farther medially and has a higher center of rotation than the posterior joint, but the two joints share a common axis of rotation. This discrepancy results in an oblique axis of rotation of the subtalar joint.

Anatomy of the Midtarsal Joint The midtarsal joint is also known as the transverse tarsal joint or Chopart’s joint. It is an S-shaped joint when viewed from above. It consists of two joints: the talonavicular joint and calcaneocuboid joint. The talonavicular (TN) joint is formed between the talar head and the concavity on the navicular. It does not have its own capsule but rather shares one with the two anterior talocalcaneal articulations [14, 15]. The calcaneocuboid (CC) joint is formed between the anterior facet of the calcaneus and the posterior cuboid. Both articulating surfaces present a convex and concave surface with the joint being convex vertically and concave transversely. Very little movement occurs at this joint.

Anatomy of the Tarsometatarsal (TMT) Joint Complex This joint is also known as Lisfranc’s joint. This complex divides the midfoot from the forefoot. The distal tarsal rows, including the three cuneiform bones and cuboid, articulate with the base of each metatarsal to form the TMT complex [14, 15]. It is an S-shaped joint and is divided into three distinct columns:

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• Medial – composed of 1st metatarsal and medial cuneiform • Middle – composed of 2nd and 3rd metatarsals, intermediate and lateral cuneiforms, respectively • Lateral – composed of 4th and 5th metatarsals and the cuboid

 natomy of the Metatarsophalangeal (MTP) Joints A and Interphalangeal (IP) Joints The Metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joints are formed between the metatarsal heads and the corresponding bases of the proximal phalanx [14, 15]. The interphalangeal joints of the toes are formed between the phalanges of the toes. Each toe has proximal and distal IP joints, except for the great toe, which only has one IP joint.

The Foot (Categories) The foot consists of three categories: the forefoot, which contains the five toes (phalanges) and the five longer bones (metatarsals); the midfoot, which is a pyramid-like collection of bones that form the arches of the feet (cuboid, navicular, and three cuneiforms); and the hindfoot, which forms the heel and ankle (talus and calcaneous). These categories consist of 26 irregularly shaped bones (seven tarsals, five metatarsals, and 14 phalanges) and six joints (ankle, subtalar, midtarsal, tarsometatarsal, metatarsophalangeal (MTP), and interphalangeal (IP) joints). The structure of the foot is illustrated in Fig. 1.22. Bones in the foot may be divided into three categories based on where they are located [13–15]. These categories (regions of the foot) are illustrated in Fig. 1.23.

Forefoot The forefoot is the very front part of the foot that includes the toes and the ball of the foot. It is made up of several parts. These parts include: Phalanges: These are the toes. They are made up of a total of 14 bones: two for the big toe and three for each of the other four toes. Metatarsals: These are five long bones that extend from the base of each toe to the midfoot. The first metatarsal bone leads to the big toe and plays an important role in propulsion (forward movement). The second, third, and fourth metatarsal bones provide stability to the forefoot.

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Fig. 1.22  Illustration of the foot

Sesamoid bones: These are two small, oval-shaped bones beneath the first metatarsal on the underside (plantar surface) of the foot. It is embedded in a tendon at the head of the bone (the part nearest to the big toe). Its role is to reinforce and reduce stress on the tendon.

Midfoot The midfoot is made up of five of the seven tarsal bones: the navicular, cuboid, and medial, middle, and lateral cuneiforms. The junction between the hind and midfoot is termed Chopart’s joint, which includes the talonavicular and calcaneocuboid joints.

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Fig. 1.23  Regions of the foot

Together, the tarsals form the arch of the foot. The arch plays a key role in weight-bearing and foot stability. The articulation of the midfoot and the forefoot forms the Lisfrane joint.

Hindfoot The hindfoot is the most posterior aspect of the foot. It consists of the talus and calcaneus, two of the seven tarsal bones. Talus: This is the bone that sits between the calcaneus and the two bones of the lower leg (the tibia and fibula). It helps transfer weight and pressure across the ankle joint. Calcaneus: This is the large foot at the heel of the foot, also known as the heel bone. Its main function is to transfer most of the body weight from the legs to the ground. The talus and calcaneus articulation is referred to as the subtaler joint, which has three facets on each of the talus and calcaneus. The hindfoot motion is often defined as occurring in the cardinal planes as follows: sagittal-plane motion (plantar flexion-dorsiflexion), frontal-plane motion (inversion-eversion), and transverse-plane motion (internal rotation-external rotation). The hindfoot motion, however, does not occur in isolation in the individual planes; rather, coordinated movement of the three joints allows the hindfoot to move as a unit about an axis of rotation oblique to the long axis of the lower leg. The

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hindfoot motion does not occur strictly in the cardinal planes because the talocrural and subtalar joints each have oblique axes of rotation. Coupled hindfoot motion is best described as pronation and supination. In the open kinetic chain, pronation consists of dorsiflexion, eversion, and external rotation, while supination consists of plantar flexion, inversion, and internal rotation. In the closed kinetic chain, pronation consists of plantar flexion, eversion, and external rotation, while supination consists of dorsiflexion, inversion, and internal rotation [13, 14]. The talocrural, or tibiotalar, joint is formed by the articulation of the dome of the talus, the medial malleolus, the tibial plafond, and the lateral malleolus. The shape of the talocrural joint allows torque to be transmitted from the lower leg (internal and external rotation) to the foot (pronation and supination) during weight-bearing. This joint is sometimes called the “mortise” joint and, in isolation, may be thought of as a hinge joint that allows the motions of plantar flexion and dorsiflexion. The axis of rotation of the talocrural joint passes through the medial and lateral malleoli. It is slightly anterior to the frontal plane as it passes through the tibia but slightly posterior to the frontal plane as it passes through the fibula. Isolated movement of the talocrural joint is primarily in the sagittal plane, but small amounts of transverse- and frontal-plane motion also occur about the oblique axis of rotation [15, 16].

Muscles Controlling Foot Movements The muscles that control the movements of the foot originate in the lower leg and are attached to the bones in the foot with tendons. The main muscles that facilitate movement in the foot include: • Tibialis posterior: The muscle that supports the foot’s arch • Tibialis anterior: The muscle that allows the foot to move upward • Peroneus longus and brevis: The muscles that control movement on the outside of the ankle • Extensors: The muscles that raise the toes to make it possible to take a step • Flexors: The muscles that stabilize the toes and curl them under

Foot-Aided Tendons Tendons are fibrous connective tissues that attach muscles to bones. There are three major tendons that help facilitate foot movement, including flexion (the forward bending of the foot) and dorsiflexion (the backward bending of the foot): Achilles tendon: This is the most notable tendon of the foot that runs from the calf muscle to the heel. It is the strongest and largest tendon in the body that makes it possible to run, jump, climb stairs, and stand on your toes [16].

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Tibialis posterior: This tendon attaches the calf muscle to the bones on the inside of the foot and supports the arch of the foot. Tibialis anterior: This tendon runs from the outer bone of the lower leg to the tarsals and first metatarsal, which enables dorsiflexion.

Primary Ligaments of the Foot Ligaments are fibrous connective tissues that connect bone to bone. These are the primary ligaments of the foot: Plantar fascia: This is the longest ligament of the foot that runs from the heel to the toes to form the arch. The plantar fascia provides strength for walking and assists with balance [15, 16]. Plantar calcaneonavicular: This is the ligament that connects the calcaneus to the talus. Its role is to support the head of the talus. Calcaneocuboid: This is the ligament that connects the calcaneus to the tarsal bones. It helps the plantar fascia support the arch of the foot.

Muscle Physiology of the Human Locomotor System A muscle is a soft tissue, a complex biochemical plant that transforms chemical energy into mechanical energy. It is controlled by neural input from the central nervous system (CNS). Therefore, muscles are the actuators of the musculoskeletal system. They generate forces between two end-points either actively through contraction or passively through their resistance to stretch [4, 11]. The muscle belly is connected to the bones or other muscles at points called origin and insertion by tendons. Muscles and tendons are surrounded by connective tissue, holding them together and separating them from their neighborhood. They also allow the muscle to slide inside this hull during movement and guide it along a predefined path, preventing displacement to the side. The muscle belly itself consists of muscle fibers that are grouped together into muscle fiber bundles (fascicles) as illustrated in Fig. 1.24. The fibers may have a length of approximately 15 centimeter and a diameter between 10 micrometers and 100 micrometers, respectively, in human. From Fig. 1.16, each muscle fiber bundle consists of muscle fibers that consist of a chain of sarcomeres. During muscle activation, a biochemical process increases the overlapping region of the actin and myosin filaments and pulls the z-membranes closer together, which results in muscle contraction [11, 16]. Each fiber is made up of so-called myofibrils that constitute some tightly packed filaments that go from one end of the muscle to the other. These myofibrils form the contractile elements of the muscle and exhibit an approximate diameter of one micrometer.

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Muscle

Z–lines I–lines A–lines

Z–lines I–lines A–lines myofilaments

actin filaments

actin filaments

Z–membrane (z–lines) myosin filaments

Z–membrane (z–lines)

sarcomere

Fig. 1.24  Illustration of the components of the human muscle; the upper images depict the whole muscle consisting of muscle fiber bundles arranged in parallel

Each myofibril may be further subdivided into a chain of sarcomeres, which exhibits the smallest contractile elements of a muscle. These sarcomeres possess some border walls called z-lines that are attached to some thin strands of actin filaments. The distance between these z-lines may be approximated between 2 and 3 micrometers, depending upon the level of contraction of the sarcomere. The myosin filaments are situated between the actin filaments.

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The activation of a muscle results in a biochemical process that allows the actin filaments to glide deeper between the myosin filaments (cross-bridge binding), in order to increase the overlapping region. By virtue of the fact that the actin filaments are attached to the z-lines results in the decrease in the distance between the z-lines, the sarcomere shortens, and so does the whole muscle. The shortening of a sarcomere could amount to approximately 60% of its rest length. The force a sarcomere may be able to generate is dependent upon its length that means, upon the distance between the z-lines. This stands to reason that the longer the sarcomere, the smaller the overlapping region of the actin and myosin filaments, respectively, and, therefore, the decrease in the resulting force. Should the sarcomere become shorter on the one hand, leads to the interference of the filaments, and hence, resulting in a decrease in force. Should a length exceed that of the optimal muscle fiber length, results in the emergence of a passive force that steadily increases with length. This force is a result of the elasticity of the myofibrils. Furthermore, the optimal muscle fiber length for the active force-length curve decreases with an increase in muscle activation by approximately 15%. The muscle force may be further influenced by the muscle velocity (the change of length per unit time). During the lengthening of the muscle, the sarcomere force increases mainly by virtue of the stretch of the elastic elements. On the other hand, the sarcomere force decreases to zero in a hyperbolic fashion during shortening. This occurs because the filament movement of actin and myosin that leads to contraction follows a repeated process of binding and detachment with a limited frequency, called the cross-bridge cycling. Based on the task to be performed by the muscle, there are apparent discrepancies in the macroscopic arrangement of the muscle fibers; that means, the more muscle fibers that work together in parallel, the stronger a muscle becomes, and the longer the muscle fiber, the more sarcomeres are linked in series, thus leading to faster contractions. Should a specific volume for a skeletal muscle be available, it may result in the arrangement of optimized fascicles as illustrated in Fig. 1.25. The fascicles may be arranged in parallel and at an angle to the direction of pull should the production of a large force be required. This requirement demands more a

b

c

d

e multipennate muscle

bipennate muscle

unipennate muscle

parallel fibered muscle

contracted relaxed

Fig. 1.25  Illustration of different muscle structures (Fig. 1.25e (Adapted from [12]) shows the change of the pennation angle in unipennate muscles through muscle contraction. (Adapted from [UHI96])

The Lower Extremity

37

fibers in parallel within the same volume by sacrificing a larger range of contraction. Such muscles are called pennate muscles. The angle between the fascicles and the direction of pull along the tendon is called the pennation angle. This angle is not fixed but rather varies with the contraction of the muscle [11]. A measure for the strength of the muscle is the physiological cross-sectional area (PCA) of a muscle that takes into account the number of sarcomeres in parallel with the angle of pull of the muscle. The motor system can measure the actual muscle length and velocity through muscle spindles, which are integrated in the muscles and tendons. They are linked to the spinal cord by nerve fibers to give feedback to the motor system.

Physiology of Muscle Activation and Electromyography The contraction of the muscle depicts a response to signals that originate from the so-called alpha-motor neurons sitting in the spinal cord or brain stem. The neurons produce an electrical impulse that travels along axons with an average velocity between 50 and 90 m/s to the neuromuscular junctions (motor endplates) sitting on top of the muscle fibers, usually near the middle or proximal to the middle. The axons branch before they reach the fibers, so that every alpha-motor neuron could be connected to a number of muscle fibers ranging from as low as 10 for eye muscles, to about 100 for muscles in the hand, and to approximately 2000 in leg muscles. The lower the number of innervated muscle fibers, the more fine-grained the control of the muscle activation could be performed by the nervous system [4, 11, 16]. However, every muscle fiber is only controlled by a single alpha-motor neuron. The alpha-motor neuron, together with the axon, motor endplate, and muscle fibers that belong to this motor neuron, is called a motor unit. The action potential that is transmitted to the motor endplates initiates a biochemical process inside the junction to the muscle fiber, the synapse, and in the synaptic cleft between the synapse and the muscle fiber membrane (postsynaptic membrane). If the resulting depolarization at the postsynaptic membrane exceeds a certain threshold, a single muscle fiber action potential may be generated that travels along the muscle fiber with a velocity between 3 and 6 m/s to excite all sarcomeres [11, 16]. This leads to contraction of the sarcomeres and to a single twitch. To achieve a longer period of contraction, a series of action potentials needs to be generated by the motor neuron, that means, a motor unit action potential train. Since a motor unit may be able to perform only an all-or-nothing activation of the muscle fiber (the strength of a twitch cannot be modulated), the strength of contraction would depend on the number of recruited motor units, that means, the number of motor neurons that produce an action potential at the same time. Typically, weaker motor units, innervating less muscle fibers, are recruited first if progressively increasing force is required. In general, motor units fire in a random pattern and are not synchronized [16].

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Fig. 1.26  Illustration of a basic muscle model

Muscles exhibit highly non-linear dynamic characteristics. The force from a muscle is dependent upon the muscle length and its contraction velocity. There are muscle models of varying complexities that depend on the overall behavior of the musculoskeletal system (Fig. 1.26).

Contribution of Muscle to Motion Control Skeletal muscles are the main functional units of the muscular system. The basic contractile properties of a muscle, such as its contraction kinetics, force versus length relationship, and force versus velocity relationship, are also known to affect its mechanical output [16]. Although muscles are often viewed as motors that produce movement by shortening to perform mechanical work, they may serve a variety of other functions during movement. They may stabilize motion at joints, store elastic energy in connective tissues, in tendons or apodemes, and also absorb work as well as perform it. The steady locomotion over level ground often involves the use of muscles to produce force economically. Muscles facilitate elastic energy recovery to achieve minimal net- work output. When movement becomes non-steady or requires changes in grade, shifts in motor recruitment will reflect the changing need for muscles to perform or absorb work. The function of a muscle during movement may also depend on the biomechanical context.

 uscle as a Smart Material with Intrinsic M Self-Stabilizing Properties Not only can different muscles innervated by the same nerve exhibit different functions during movement, but different muscle segments within a single fascicle may also exhibit different mechanical output during a single contraction [11, 16]. In addition to generating force and producing or absorbing energy, muscles also play important intrinsic, self-stabilizing roles during movement due to their force versus velocity, force versus length, and viscoelastic properties. For example, when subjected to a higher force, the force output of skeletal muscle increases automatically to resist the imposed load. Similarly, if a muscle is suddenly unloaded, its rate

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of shortening increases and its force production decreases. This self-stabilization behavior results from the inverse force versus velocity relationship exhibited by all striated muscles. Hence, the intrinsic force versus velocity and force versus length properties of striated muscle provide immediate impedance responses that help to stabilize movement in response to perturbations prior to the subsequent action of force-dependent and length-dependent reflexes that incur time delays and are known to modulate motor recruitment during ongoing tasks. These intrinsic musculoskeletal properties, including force versus length and force versus velocity behavior, can stabilize movement and simplify control. The viscoelastic properties of active muscle also provide self-stabilization during perturbations in load and contribute to active motor control.

Cerebral Blood Flow in the Human Locomotor System Cerebral circulation is the blood flow in the brain. It is important for healthy brain function. Circulating blood supplies the brain with the oxygen and nutrients it needs to function properly [17, 18]. Blood delivers oxygen and glucose to the brain. CBF or perfusion is a measure of the rate of delivery of arterial blood to a capillary bed in the brain tissue. The brain is unique with a high metabolic rate and its oxygen demand exceeds that of all organs except the heart. It is approximately 2% of body mass and receives 20% of the basal oxygen consumption and 15% of the resting cardiac output (700 ml.min−1 in the adult). Blood supply to the brain originates from the dorsal aorta, provided by the common carotid arteries, which branch into internal carotid arteries, and the basilar artery, formed by the union of the two vertebral arteries, which are branch of the subclavian artery. The anastomoses between these two sets of vessels give rise to the Circle of Willis. Autoregulation constitutes the ability of the cerebral circulation to maintain cerebral blood flow at a relatively constant level despite changes in cerebral perfusion pressure by altering cerebrovascular resistance (CVR). Knowledge of the physiology and pathophysiology of the cerebral blood flow (CBF) is essential for the proper treatment of patients with major intracranial disease and for neuroanesthesia in particular [18, 19]. The brain, undertaking normal intellectual functioning, uses oxygen at a rate of approximately 35 mL/min/kg brain tissue, so for a 70 kg man with 1.5 kg brain, basal whole body oxygen consumption is 280 mL/min with brain oxygen consumption of 50 mL/min.

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Fractal Dynamics in the Human Locomotor System A fractal is a never-ending pattern that the laws of nature repeat at different scales. They are created by repeating a simple process over and over in an ongoing feedback loop. The human brain, with its exquisite complexity, can be seen as a fractal object, and fractal analysis can be successfully applied to analyze its wide physio-­ pathological spectrum and to describe its self-similar patterns in both neuroanatomical architecture and neurophysiological time-series [21–23]. The human locomotor system integrates muscles, motor pattern generators, and the brain (motor cortex, cerebellum, and basal ganglia), as well as feedback from sense organs (visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive sensors), to produce a stable, highly consistent, and coordinated walking pattern not only in complex terrain but also when confronted with unexpected perturbations. In fact, the kinetics, kinematics, and muscular activity of gait appear to remain relatively constant from one stride to the next, even during unconstrained walking. Recent research depicts the existence of some complex fluctuations in the gait pattern, even under constant environmental conditions. These fluctuations were usually considered as “noise” and something to be ignored and filtered out of any analysis. Therefore, quantitative studies of walking typically focused on the properties of each participant’s average stride, ignoring the within-subject stride-to-stride fluctuations. However, it has been alleged that this noise actually conveys some important information. Fractal dynamics exhibit the apparent “noisy” variations in the stride interval of human walking. Analysis of the dynamic characteristics of these stride-to-stride fluctuations reveals a self-similar pattern; fluctuations at one time scale are statistically similar to those at multiple other time scales, at least over hundreds of steps, while healthy subjects walk at their normal rate. Statistical physics typically deals with phase transitions, fluctuations, and interactions that occur at the microscopic level during mobility. Knowledge of these fluctuations provides insight into the neural control of locomotion as well as its changes with aging and disease [21–23]. There are some walking patterns that may be observed. One such pattern involves walking that appears to be a periodic, regular process. However, reliable measurement would depict small fluctuations in the gait pattern, even under stationary conditions. A possible analytic interpretation of these stride-to-stride variations in the walking rhythm is that they simply represent uncorrelated (white) noise superimposed on a basically regular process. This is what one might expect a priori if one assumes that these subtle fluctuations are merely “noise.” Another way to interpret these fluctuations is that there are finite-range correlations: the current value is influenced by only the most recent stride intervals, but over the long term, fluctuations are random. Furthermore, a less intuitive possibility involves that the fluctuations in the stride interval exhibit long-range correlations, as seen in a wide class of scale-free phenomena. In this case, the stride interval at any instant would depend (at least in a statistical sense) on the interval at relatively

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remote times, and this dependence would decay in a scale-free (fractal-like) power-­ law fashion. The magnitude of the stride-to-stride fluctuations and their changes over time during human locomotion may be useful in understanding the motor control of gait in quantifying pathologic and age-related alterations in the locomotor control system, and in augmenting objective measurement of mobility and functional status. Indeed, alterations in gait dynamics may help to determine disease severity and medication utility and to objectively document improvements in response to therapeutic interventions, above and beyond what can be gleaned from measures based on the average, typical stride [22, 23]. Upon these understandings, it may be asserted that gait dynamics has meaning that may be useful for providing insight into the neural control of locomotion and for enhancing functional assessment of aging, chronic disease, and their impact on mobility.

Space

HEAD

TRUNK

LEGS

FEET Body Support

Fig. 1.27  Body on support in space

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 erceptual and Feedback: Somatosensory System P in the Human Locomotor System The human locomotor system is structured in a hierarchy such that it consists of linked reference systems that are anchored in gravito-inertia space. This proposed reference system represents the internal reconstruction of the physics, the kinematic aspects of the biomechanical system. The perceptual notion of space is derived mainly through vestibular sensors [2]. The vestibular canal signal that results from the head motion in space interacts with otolith and optokinetic signals. This interaction is then transferred to the feet by means of axial proprioceptive signals of the inter-segmental angles. This inter-­ segmental system attaches its space reference to the body’s feet, legs (shank and thigh), trunk, and head by means of a set of different proprioceptive inputs, Fig. 1.27. Both conscious perception and sensory control of action are derived from this resulting interactive system. The information pertaining to the conscious perception and sensory control of action (kinematics and kinetics of the inter-segmental system) is always available to the perceptual and sensorimotor systems because the interactions of the linked reference systems are continuously updated [2]. The kinematic signals and the related kinetic signals represent the global variables for the sensorimotor control. For sensorimotor control, these signals are fed as set point signals into the local proprioceptive feedback loops of the joints, together with voluntary commands.

Somatosensory System Soma is the Greek word for body. The human somatosensory system serves three major functions. These include (1) exteroceptive (perceiving stimuli outside of our body), (2) interoceptive (perceiving stimuli inside of our body), and (3) proprioceptive (controlling body position and balance) functions [25, 26]. The somatosensory receptors are the sense organs that send signals along a sensory nerve to the spinal cord where they may be processed by other sensory neurons and then relayed to the brain for further processing activated by different stimuli such as the following: 1 . Thermoreceptor: carries information about temperature changes. 2. Mechanoreceptors: responds to mechanical pressure or distortion such as lamellar corpuscles (Pacinian corpuscles), tactile corpuscles (Meissner’s corpuscles), Merkel nerve endings, and bulbous corpuscles (Ruffini corpuscle). 3. Chemoreceptors: transduces a chemical substance to generate a biological signal, such as taste receptors, carotid bodies. 4. Nociceptors: pain receptor

Perceptual and Feedback: Somatosensory System in the Human Locomotor System

b

Cerebral cortex

Somatic sensory cortex

43

Dorsal root ganglion cells Mechanosensory afferent fiber

Thalamus Brainstem

Trigeminal ganglia (sensory receptors for face)

Receptor endings

Pain and temperature afferent fiber

Spinal cord

Cervical

Sensory receptor Thoracic

Lumber

Dorsal root ganglia (sensory receptors for body)

Sacral

Fig. 1.28  Somatosensory information transmission

• External nociceptors found in the skin (cutaneous nociceptors), the corneas, and the mucosa • Internal nociceptors found in muscles, joints, bladder, digestive tract • The cell bodies of these neurons are located in either the dorsal root ganglia or the trigeminal ganglia. The trigeminal ganglia are specialized nerves for the face; the dorsal root ganglia are associated with the rest of the body. Cutaneous sensory receptors may be classified as mechanoreceptors, thermoreceptors, and nociceptors.

 omatosensory Afferents Convey Information from the Skin S Surface to Central Circuits The sensation of touch is mainly mediated by mechanoreceptors, but there are a number of other processing channels within the somatosensory system for proprioception, pain, and temperature, Fig. 1.28. Somatosensory information from the face is transmitted via the trigeminal nerve. Pain is conventionally viewed as a submodality of cutaneous sensation. Functional,

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anatomical, and imaging data suggest that pain impulses are conveyed by specific sensory channels or labeled lines that ascend in a central homeostatic afferent pathway. A sensory channel is the sensory mechanism responsible for conveying the information needed for the recognition of a sensory modality. Each sensory channel includes one or more sets of sensory receptors, one or more ascending pathways, specific regions of the thalamus and cerebral cortex, and descending pathways that may modify the ascending pathway [24, 25]. The terms large-and small-fibred used were for want of a better pair. The large-fibred somatic afferent system deals with the discriminative-sensory aspects of somaesthesis and the small-fibred system with the affective-vegetative components of the perceptions evoked by all but the blandest of somatic stimuli. The discriminative-sensory systems include those of the dorsal and dorsolateral columns and the trigeminal lemniscal system that deal with the mechanoreceptive aspects of somaesthesis. The affective-vegetative systems convey somatosensory information from all the spinal columns, especially from the ventral Fig. 1.29  Basic anatomy of the spinal cord

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quadrants, and from the spinal trigeminothalamic tract, which not only converge on the relay nuclei of the discriminative-sensory systems but also have their own channels to frontal, lateral, and limbic cortical circuits to deal with affect and emotional reactions [29, 30]. The peripheral nerves of the upper extremity arise from the brachial plexus, formed by the union of the ventral branches of the C5–T1 segments, Fig. 1.29. The main peripheral nerves of the upper extremity are the axillary (C5, C6) and radial (C5–T1) nerves, arising from the posterior cord of the brachial plexus, the musculocutaneous nerve (C5–C7) from its lateral cord, the ulnar nerve (C7–T1) from the medial cord with a contribution from the posterior cord, and the median nerve (C5– T1) from the union of the remaining parts of the lateral and medial cords. Figure 1.29 illustrates the basic anatomy of the spinal cord [30–32]. The sensory branches are shown in Figs. 1.28 and 1.29, respectively. A lesion of a spinal nerve will show a strictly segmental distribution of the sensory deficit, whereas a lesion of a peripheral nerve (a mono-neuropathy) will show a typical sensory deficit distribution over the skin area innervated by that particular nerve. A mono-neuropathy is usually due to compression, affecting the myelinated fibers first [33]. The peripheral nerves of the lower extremity arise from the lumbosacral plexus. The main peripheral nerves for the lower limb are the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve (L2, L3), the femoral nerve (L2–L4) and the obturator nerve (L3, L4) from the lumbar plexus, and the superior (L4–S1) and inferior (L5–S2) gluteal nerves and the ischiadic nerve (L4–S3) from the sacral plexus. Sensations are disparate pieces of information that are acquired and processed by the nervous system to enable the body and mind to adapt to the environment. The vestibular and proprioceptive senses are the least present in our conscious awareness because they operate at an unconscious level [32]. More severe damage may lead to radicular sensory and motor losses associated with abnormal reflexes. Syndromes of root damage limited to individual cervical roots may be summarized as follows, Fig. 1.29: 1 . C3, C4: pain in the neck and shoulder; rarely partial paresis of the diaphragm 2. C5: pain, potentially hypalgesia in dermatome C5; disorders in the innervation of the deltoid and biceps brachii muscles 3. C6: pain, potentially hypalgesia in dermatome C6; paresis of the biceps brachii and brachioradialis muscles; decreased biceps tendon reflex 4. C7: pain, potentially paraesthesias or hypalgesia in dermatome C7; paresis of the triceps brachii and teres muscles and possibly atrophy of the thenar muscles; decreased triceps tendon reflex 5. C8: pain, possibly paraesthesias and hypalgesia in dermatome C8; paresis and possibly atrophy of the hypothenar muscles; decreased triceps tendon reflex Lumbar discs may also cause irritation to nerve roots, felt as pain and paraesthesias in the corresponding segments as lumbago or sciatica. More severe damage to the roots produces segmental sensory and motor deficits.

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Syndromes of lesions limited to individual lumbar roots. may be summarized as follows, Fig. 1.29: 1. L3: pain, possibly paraesthesias in dermatome L3; paresis of the quadriceps femoris muscle; decreased or missing quadriceps femoris tendon (patellar) reflex 2. L4: pain, possibly paraesthesias or hypalgesia in dermatome L4; paresis of the quadriceps femoris and tibialis anterior muscles; reduced patellar reflex 3. L5: pain, possibly paraesthesias or hypalgesia in dermatome L5; paresis of the extensor hallucis longus and extensor digitorum brevis muscles; absence of posterior tibial tendon reflex 4. S1: pain, possibly paraesthesias or hypalgesia in dermatome S1; paresis of the peroneal and triceps surae muscles; loss of triceps surae tendon (Achilles tendon) reflex

Significance of the Somatosensory System The human somatosensory system is the system that subserves our sense of touch, which is so essential to our awareness of the world and of our own bodies. Touch could protect our bodies because many receptors are on the skin, which covers the whole body and detects harmful stimuli. Somatosensory information from the skin, muscles, joint capsules, and viscera is conveyed by the dorsal root ganglion neurons innervating the limbs and trunk or by trigeminal sensory neurons that innervate cranial structures (the face, lips, oral cavity, conjunctiva, and dura mater). These sensory neurons perform major functions: (1) the transduction and encoding of stimuli into electrical signals and (2) the transmission of those signals to the central nervous system. The somatosensory system has by far the largest number of receptor types of any of the primate sensory systems, including mechanoreceptors, chemoreceptors, nociceptors, and thermoreceptors [35, 36, 38]. The interoception was conceptually differentiated from the exteroception (sensory inputs activated from outside the body), proprioception (sensory inputs that relate to limb position), telereception (sensory input from a distance: vision and hearing), chemoreception (taste and smell), thermo-reception (temperature), and nociception (sensory inputs activated specifically by physically damaging or threatening stimuli). He categorized nociception and thermos-reception with the sense of touch as aspects of exteroception. A century later, Craig [25, 52] suggested to expand on the term interoception and included small-diameter sensory input from the whole body, not only from viscera, muscles, joints, and teeth but also from the skin, the largest organ of the body. In this conceptual framework, nociception and thermos-reception are aspects of interoception, not of exteroception, because they report aspects of the physiological condition of the body conveyed by small-­ diameter sensory fibers and the spinothalamic pathway to the interoceptive cortex [35].

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Interoception is defined as “The sensory representation of the physiological condition of all tissues and organs of the body.” Consequently, exteroception in this scheme is redefined to include only touch perception enabled by cutaneous low-­ threshold mechanoreceptors and the large-fiber system [32]. The sensation of touch is mainly mediated by mechanoreceptors, but there are a number of other processing channels within the somatosensory system for proprioception, pain, and temperature. The classic view of two independent channels for somatosensory information from the trunk and the extremities, i.e., the dorsal column-­medial lemniscus system for tactile sensitivity and position sense and the anterolateral or spinothalamic system for pain and temperature sensitivity, has been modified through the discovery of additional spinal pathways for the transmission of sensory impulses to the brain and by new views on pain mechanisms. Somatosensory information from the face is transmitted via the trigeminal nerve [32, 34, 36]. Pain is conventionally viewed as a submodality of cutaneous sensation. Functional, anatomical, and imaging data suggest that pain impulses are conveyed by specific sensory channels or labeled lines that ascend in a central homeostatic afferent pathway. The overarching purpose of the human somatosensory system is to inform the brain of the mechanical state of the body that it inhabits [36]. It shares this function with the vestibular system. But whereas the vestibular system operates in the low-­ dimensional space of head translations and rotations, the somatosensory system takes its input from almost the entire body. The main sources of information arise in part from the load-bearing structures represented by connective tissues, such as tendons and ligaments, in part from the motion-producing tissues, the muscles, and in part from the outer layers of body, that is the skin. As a result, unlike the vestibular system, which is sensitive to the movements of a rigid body, the cranium, the somatosensory system relates to mechanical domains that are in essence deformable bodies. This explains why, despite the fact that the two systems share the same overall task, they differ fundamentally [40, 41]. The vestibular system responds to body movement and changes in head position. This system is responsible for coordinating movements of the eye, head, and body through receptors in the inner ear [42, 45, 46]. It responds to the pull of gravity, registers where the body is in relationship to the earth, and is considered to be the bedrock of physical and emotional security. Vestibular input helps us maintain our balance by telling us whether we are at rest or in motion, how fast and in what direction we are moving, and by registering the movement of objects around us. The vestibular inputs arise from small, easily identifiable organs in the inner ears; it is the low-dimensional description of the movements of a rigid body that is of interest. In contrast, the somatosensory system relates to what is essentially an infinite, dimensional solid (and liquid) domain and depends on the changes of its internal mechanical state to infer the properties of the objects that are being touched, such as their weight, the substance they are made of, or the existence and nature of the relative movement of the body in relation to external objects [43, 44]. In other words, it is a distributed system in the physical sense that its mechanical state is

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described by (tensor) fields rather than vector quantities. This basic fact is of course reflected in its general organization, where very large populations of specific detectors are found in all load-bearing and load-producing tissues. That is not to say that the somatosensory system is unique in its reliance on large populations of sensors. This is also true of all sensory systems, including vision, audition, and taste/olfaction, and of the vestibular system. A somatosensory pathway will typically consist of three neurons: primary, secondary, and tertiary. In the periphery, the primary neuron is the sensory receptor that detects sensory stimuli like touch or temperature. The cell body of the primary neuron is housed in the dorsal root ganglion of a spinal nerve or, if sensation is in the head or neck, the ganglia of the trigeminal or cranial nerves [32]. The secondary neuron acts as a relay and is located in either the spinal cord or the brain stem. This neuron’s ascending axons will cross, or decussate, to the opposite side of the spinal cord or brainstem and travel up the spinal cord to the brain, where most will terminate in either the thalamus or the cerebellum. In the case of touch, the tertiary neuron has its cell body in the thalamus and projects to the parietal lobe of the brain. In the case of the maintenance of posture, the tertiary neuron is located in the cerebellum. Proprioception  (Latin proprius, one’s own) and it is through proprioceptive input that we know our own body, where it is, and how it is moving. Proprioceptors transmit information to the brain from the muscles, joints, and bones. Because there are so many joints, muscles, and bones in the human body, this system is almost as large as the tactile system (about 70% of the sensory receptors are located in the skin). It transmits continuous information to the brain. The proprioceptive senses are generated as a result of our own actions that include the senses of position and movement of our limbs and trunk, the sense of effort, the sense of force, and the sense of heaviness. The receptors that enable proprioception are located in the skin, muscles, and joints. The information concerning the position of the limb and movement is not generated by individual receptors, but by population of afferents [27, 33, 35]. Afferent signals generated during a movement are processed to code for the end point position of a limb. The afferent input is referred to a central body map to determine the location of the limbs in space. Receptors in skeletal muscle, joint capsules, and the skin enable us to have conscious awareness of the posture and movements of our own body, particularly the four limbs and the head. Although one can move parts of the body without sensory feedback from proprioceptors, the movements are often clumsy, poorly coordinated, and inadequately adapted to complex tasks, particularly if visual guidance is absent. Vibration produces sensations of limb displacement and movement, leading the subject to express astonishment at the unwilled nature of the sensations. This suggests that the will to move and the subsequent proprioceptive sensations are intimately linked. Proprioceptive sensations are mysterious because we are largely unaware of them [27, 36]. They are distinguishable from exteroceptors such as the eye and the ear in that they are not associated with specific, recognizable sensations.

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If sensory receptors contribute to conscious sensation, their afferents must project to the cerebral cortex. It is now well established from studies on animals that afferents from muscle spindles and tendon organs, as well as those from skin and joint, project to the cortex. The pathway taken by skin and joint afferents is via the dorsal (posterior) columns, gracile and cuneate nuclei, medial lemniscus, and thalamus. Muscle afferents from the forelimb also project centrally via the dorsal columns [32, 35, 36]. However, for the hindlimbs, muscle afferents, unlike skin and joint afferents, leave the dorsal column in the upper lumbar region, synapse in Clarke’s column, and project centrally in the dorsolateral funiculus as the dorsal spinocerebellar tract. Spindles provide information about length changes in muscles, and this is represented as changes in joint angles. Therefore, the vibration of one muscle group is able to generate a muscle-specific sensation. This stands to reason that the brain has access to information specific to individual muscles. While that is so, it does not preclude the possibility that input from the whole limb is used to calculate movement-related proprioceptive signals. The dynamic sensitivity of muscle spindles and skin stretch receptors provides the basis for our ability to detect small movements of our limbs [40]. Proprioceptive senses, particularly those of limb position and movement, deteriorate with age and are associated with an increased risk of falls in the elderly. Both the vestibular and proprioceptive systems regulate our posture and muscle tone. They offer us information in relation to whether we are standing or sitting, slouching or squatting, bending or straightening, or stretching [37]. They assist in the negotiation of the distance from other people and objects. The vestibular and proprioceptive systems together excite such activities, including running, jumping, climbing, spinning, and swinging, etc.

Information Acquisition Through Proprioception Robust locomotion relies on information from proprioceptors: sensory organs that communicate the position of body parts to the spinal cord and brain. Proprioceptive circuits in the spinal cord are known to regulate locomotion in challenging environments. In mammals, information about body position in space and relative to the body itself (i.e., “proprioception”) is conveyed by mechanosensory neurons found within muscles, tendons, and joints [36, 40]. Proprioceptive senses play significant roles in signaling body shape, body position and movement, and muscle force. Hence, proprioceptive senses are generated as a result of our own actions and/or behaviors. They include the senses of position and movement of our limbs and trunk, the sense of effort, the sense of force, and the sense of heaviness. In fact, the term proprioceptor has been restricted to receptors concerned with conscious sensations, and these include the senses of limb position and movement, the sense of tension or force, the sense of effort, and the sense of balance. Receptors involved in proprioception are located in the skin, muscles, and

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joints [39–41]. Information about limb position and movement is not generated by individual receptors, but by populations of afferents. Afferent signals generated during a movement are processed to code for the end point position of a limb. The afferent input is referred to a central body map to determine the location of the limbs in space. However, like the proprioceptive system, the vestibular system contributes to a range of conscious sensations as well as the guidance of movement and posture. Proprioceptive sensations are mysterious because we are largely unaware of them. They are distinguishable from exteroceptors such as the eye and the ear in that they are not associated with specific, recognizable sensations. Yet, when we are not actually looking at our limbs, we are able to indicate with reasonable accuracy their positions and whether they are moving. During limb movement and changes in position, the tissues around the relevant joints will be deformed, including the skin, muscles, tendons, fascia, joint capsules, and ligaments. All these tissues are innervated by mechanically sensitive receptors, and their density varies across muscles and regions of the body. Muscle spindles play a major role in kinesthesia, with some skin receptors providing additional information. Furthermore, the Golgi tendon organs contribute to proprioception, including the senses of force and heaviness. Joint receptors probably play only a minor role at most joints, acting as limit detectors. There is also some evidence of a contribution by joint receptors in the mid-range of movements at the finger joints [39, 41]. The afferents of sensory receptors project to the cerebral cortex in order to contribute to conscious sensations. In fact, animal studies have established that afferents from muscle spindles and tendon organs, as well as those from skin and joint, project to the cortex. The pathway taken by skin and joint afferents is via the dorsal (posterior) columns, gracile and cuneate nuclei, medial lemniscus, and thalamus. Muscle afferents from the forelimb also project centrally via the dorsal columns. However, for the hindlimbs, muscle afferents, unlike skin and joint afferents, leave the dorsal column in the upper lumbar region, synapse in Clarke’s column, and project centrally in the dorsolateral funiculus as the dorsal spinocerebellar tract.

Exteroception Exteroception is the sense of direct interaction with the external world as it impacts on the body. The principal mode of exteroception is the sense of touch, which includes sensations of contact, pressure, stroking, motion, and vibration, and it is used to identify objects. Some touch involves an active motor component—stroking, tapping, grasping, or pressing, whereby a part of the body is moved against another surface or organism. The sensory and motor components of touch are intimately connected anatomically in the brain and are important in guiding behavior [40, 41].

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Exteroception also includes the thermal senses of heat and cold. Thermal sensations are important controllers of behavior and homeostatic mechanisms needed to maintain the body temperature near 37 °C (98.6 °F). In fact, exteroception includes the sense of pain, or nociception, as a response to external events that damage or harm the body. Nociception is a prime motivator of actions necessary for survival, such as withdrawal or combat. The third component of somatic sensation, interoception, is the sense of the function of the major organ systems of the body and its internal state. Although most of the events recorded by receptors in the viscera do not become conscious sensations, the information conveyed by these receptors is crucial for regulating autonomic functions, particularly in the cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, and renal systems. Interoceptors are primarily chemoreceptors that monitor organ function through such indicators as blood gases and pH.

I nformation Acquisition Through Exteroception and Interoception Exteroception, which is perceived as our sense and interaction with the external world, encompasses (according to most definitions) the primary sensory systems of vision, audition, olfaction, taste, and somatosensation. Interoception refers to the perception of the physiological conditions of the body, including hunger, temperature, and heart rate. There is a growing appreciation that interoception is integral to higher-order cognition. Interoception is described as the perception of the internal state of one’s body; as such, signals including those relating to hunger, temperature, heart rate, and blood sugar levels are all interocep-tive in nature. These bodily signals are thought to be represented within the insula and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), leading these structures to be collectively referred to as the interoceptive cortex. In addition to the importance of interoception for physical health, recent research has suggested that interoception may play a role in higher-order cognition, such as in emotional memory [28]. The interoceptive system encompasses the ability of the nervous system to represent our own internal world. Although the efferent role of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in homeostasis has long been recognized, the afferent aspects of the ANS are increasingly recognized as equally important. Interoception is fundamental to the regulation of internal physiology, particularly as it is coordinated with contextually determined and adaptive behavioral processes. A cardinal, but often underappreciated, feature of interoception is its complex role in a myriad of integrative cognitive and affective processes in health and disease. Interoception is a multidimensional construct, broadly encompassing the processing of afferent (sensory) information arising from internal organs, tissues, and

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cells of the body. This afference contributes to the regulation of homeostatic reflexes, and to the generation and regulation of cognitive and emotional behaviors. Interoception can be encompassed by the broader construct of bodily afferents. The latter includes both visceral afferents and somatic afferents. We use the term visceral afferents to refer to the processing of internal sensory information derived from interoceptors that are located in the organs, tissues, and cells of the main cavities of the body (e.g., the viscera), as well as from olfactory and gustatory receptors, all being generally associated with the limbic system and the autonomic nervous system [45, 46]. We use the term somatic afferents to refer to the processing of sensory information (e.g., proprioceptive input and tactile sensitivity) derived from components of the somatic system (e.g., muscles, joints, skin). This distinction between somatic and visceral afferents does not imply complete independence. Indeed, in many cases, there is an integration of multiple modes of bodily or somatosensory information derived, for example, from metabolic changes in active muscle tissue. Hence, the term somato-visceral afferents is more appropriately applied to integrated, multimodal, or otherwise nonspecific internal sensory input from within the body. In these regards, the construct of interoception itself is more specifically aligned with that of visceral afferents, referring to the processing of sensory information from interoceptors that are located within the visceral organs and from interoceptors located elsewhere in the body that provide for local energy needs. Thus, in contrast to exteroceptors, interoceptors are tuned to sense internal events. The so-called general visceral afferents (GVAs) that relay internal sensory information from interoceptors are carried by several cranial nerves, the most notable being the vagus nerve. These afferents carry information (e.g., pressor receptor activity) from the gut and the viscera more generally (i.e., organs and tissues located in the thoracic, abdominal, and pelvic cavities, as well as blood vessels and muscles). By comparison, special visceral afferents (SVAs) convey gustatory senses (i.e., taste) and olfaction (this means, smell and pheromonal senses). Although the SVAs detect environmental stimuli, they do so by virtue of those stimuli impinging on the bodily environment. Hence, they differ from exteroceptors, for example, in conveying information related to touch or audition [47]. Furthermore, the visceral senses have common central projections to cell groups in the thalamus that are distinct from those of somatic exteroceptors, and they link anatomically and functionally with a distinct set of central neural systems and processes. Moreover, they share biochemical markers in common with GVAs afferents and with autonomic. There are other classes of sensory systems, such as proprioceptors, that sense joint position, and vestibuloceptors, that sense body orientation in gravitational space. These might be considered interoceptors, as they are internal to the body. Yet, they are closely linked with somatic motor systems anatomically and functionally, and they have biochemical markers more in concert with somatic motor systems. Hence, they are sometimes considered within the unique class of proprioceptors or otherwise just included within the general class of exteroceptors.

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Systems Analysis Approach in Human Locomotor System A primary goal of the systems analysis approach is to simplify the immense complexity of the locomotor system (with its multi-body dynamics, biomechanics, multi-sensory integration, feedback and feed forward control, cognition, volition, etc.). The application of parameter identification on a given subject may offer insight into the control functions and the deficits, and may enable us to better understand the effects of therapy, and to design new therapeutic concepts. The systems approach is more convenient because the multi-segmented organism resulting from the system of linked kinematic references exhibits high complexity of biological systems and non-linear characteristics [2, 5]. The approach may provide a wealth of information on basic mechanisms, such as the postural reflexes. Noticeably, because of these features, it is essentially impossible to describe biological functions by means of mathematical formulations. The systems analysis approach compares external stimuli and responses to make inferences on the mechanisms inside the multi-segmented linked references of the musculoskeletal system, thereby arriving at formal descriptions of the mechanisms. The application of psychophysics, that is, by measuring perception while controlling for action and cognition, becomes an essential methodology in the input-output relationships within the complex musculoskeletal system. Some internal representations of body kinematics can be accessed by psychophysics, that is, by measuring motion perception. During dynamic behavior in space, many receptors in various sensor systems are activated in the body. Fortunately, the most relevant contributions come from a few sensors only. These include the proprioceptive, vestibular, and visual sensors.

The Vestibular System Anatomically, this system consists of two parts: the macular organs and the semicircular canals. Their functions are those of a 3D accelerometer and a 3D gyrometer (angular speedometer), respectively. With only the biological accelerometers in the head, a distinction between head tilt and head linear acceleration would not be possible. In combination with the gyrometer, however, such a distinction is possible. This “canal-otolith interaction” represents a sensor fusion that yields from the two input organs three signals: i) head rotational velocity, ii) head angle with respect to the gravitational vector, and iii) head linear acceleration. Simulations of this sensor fusion predicted, in accordance with experimental findings, improvements of transmitted information. Improvements are required because signal transfer in the biological gyrometer from angular acceleration, the stimulus, to velocity, the signal in primary canal afferent nerve fibers, is not ideal. Mathematically, this transfer corresponds to an incomplete integration.

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The Joint Angle Sense (Proprioception) We know today that the position sense of a limb involves not only spindle receptors in the muscles but also receptors in the skin and in the capsules of the joints. When tested with psychophysical means, one finds that the brain combines these many signals into a rather accurate position sense over a broad dynamic range. The technical equivalent of this sensor would be a goniometer (an angle measuring device, often simply realized in the form of a pivotable potentiometer). From the angular position signal, we may then derive, in addition, the corresponding velocity signal (by differentiation). Physiological and psychophysical evidence clearly indicates such an additional velocity signal. A simple way to demonstrate this is to activate, from the outside, primary spindle afferents by muscle vibration of an immobilized arm, for instance. The arm is then perceived as moving (but, paradoxically, not as displaced, which may indicate a functional segregation of central velocity and position pathways).

Fig. 1.30  Balancing of the body

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The Visual Orientation Cues Vision provides information about the relative motion (velocity) between body and the visual surroundings. Furthermore, vertical and horizontal items in the scene are used to establish a notion of the “visual vertical,” that is, of the body angle with respect to the vertical elements in the scene (with an orientation parallel to that of trees and orthogonal to the horizon). Corresponding technical sensors (cameras and image processing devices) which can extract those signals are nowadays available.

The Somatosensory Plantar Pressure Receptors The sum of all reaction forces at the level of the foot soles and the support surface, Fig. 1.30, may be mathematically treated as acting at one point, called the Center of Pressure (COP; in posturography, COP shifts arising during body sway are measured with the help of a 2D force platform). Constituents of the COP are (i) the gravitational vector of the body’s Center of Mass (COM), (ii) the active torque that is produced in the ankle joint, and (iii) the effects of external contact forces (such as a push against or a pull on the body) to the extent that they are transmitted to the feet [49, 50]. The receptors appear to be located in deep structures of the foot arch, whereas more superficial mechanoreceptors in the foot sole skin appear to be used to analyze the texture of the support surface, slip, etc. Knowing the orientation of the head in space (e.g., through vestibular signals) and the angles between the body segments means that we also continuously know the orientation of the other segments in space, and here, during standing with firm foot-ground contact, also of the body support surface.

Data Acquisition in Human Locomotor System During biped stance or locomotion, humans show remarkable skills in reactive balancing upon external disturbances. Balancing is often investigated in response to three external mechanical stimuli, Fig. 1.30. These include the body support surface tilt, the surface translation, and the contact force (e.g., a push or pull having impact on the body). It may be considered that the standing body is an inverted pendulum and is, therefore, inherently unstable. Gravitational torque arising with its angular excursions away from the ideal gravitational vertical tends to tip it over. Therefore, gravity will here be considered the fourth external stimulus. Taken together, it stands to reason that the most relevant external stimulus types to be considered for posture control are the field force gravity, contact forces, support surface translational acceleration, and support surface rotation. With the human

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body’s biomechanics modeled as a single inverted pendulum, the stimuli mechanically affect stance through torque disturbances (gravitational, external, inertial, and passive). For disturbance estimation and compensation, three sensors (vestibular, ankle angle, and ankle torque) appear to be instrumental. These underlying physical stimuli are very essential toward the control of stance. Hence, the sensors and the physical variables they measure play such a significant role in the understanding of the modeling of the stance. It is essential to consider only the sensors that are instrumental for balancing: the vestibular, the joint angle, and the joint torque sensors, respectively. Visual and tactile orientation cues, as well as foot sole shear cues, remain unconsidered because they are not instrumental. Since it is assumed that very large and fast body movements do not occur during stance, the field forces centrifugal and Coriolis forces are not considered at all. For purposes of simplicity, it may be assumed that all rotations occur at the ankle joint and that foot-support contact is fixed. The main physical variables that arise with the four stimuli and are measured by the following three sensor systems include: • The ankle angle proprioception (PROP): This yields the measurements of body-­ foot angle and the angular velocity, which are essentially ideal. They illustrate the unity sensor transfer function over the considered range of body sway amplitudes and velocities, and frequencies. • The vestibular system (VEST): This yields broad-band pass measures of the vertical body-space angle and the angular velocity. Furthermore, it provides a measure of the translational head-space acceleration. Therefore, one may actually distinguish between a vestibular rotation sensor and a vestibular translation sensor. • The ankle torque sensor (TORQUE): This measure of the torque may be derived from the Golgi tendon organs of the ankle muscles (located at the muscle-tendon junctions) or from the COP sensing pressure receptors deep in the foot soles. Studies in psychophysics have shown that humans use the vestibular signals for perceiving not only head-space motion but also trunk-space motion (e.g., of motion of the COM in the torso) or foot-space motion (or even foot support-space motion, given fixed haptic foot-support contact). This is achieved through inter-link sensory coordinate transformations using, for example, neck proprioception during head-­ trunk movements.

Data Acquisition: The Vestibular System The vestibular system supports four physiological functions of spatially oriented behavior: perceptual orientation, body stabilization, retinal image stabilization (mainly via compensatory eye movements, the vestibulo-ocular reflex, VOR), and autonomic nervous functions that include reactive blood redistribution upon changes in body orientation.

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The vestibular organs are located as a symmetric pair in the right and left inner ear. Encapsulated by bone, they encode field forces such as gravito-inertial forces. Each organ comprises two receptor systems; (1) In the otolith transducer, the shear force between a heavy membrane and its support bends the sensory hair cells, yielding a neural signal of gravito-inertial acceleration, and (2) The semicircular canal transducers comprise fluid filled circular tubes, one for each of the three orthogonal rotational planes. Upon angular acceleration, fluid inertia exerts pressure on hair cells embedded in a gelatinous membrane (cupula) that obstructs fluid rotation around the canal. This leads to a neural signal during head rotation, but not translation. Due to its viscous-elastic properties, the responds to angular accelerations at frequencies above 0.1 Hz with a 90-degree phase lag, i.e., with a velocity signal. (Thus, the transducer can be viewed as an angular velocity meter with a decay time constant; canal time constant T = 5 s.) Vertigo and disequilibrium arise most often from unilateral canal lesions. Underlying is that vestibular coding of rotation is a bilaterally distributed push-pull system that modulates activity about a resting level. Consequently, pathological firing reduction on one side leads to an imbalance of the push-pull system, resulting in a self-rotation illusion. The ensuing attempt to compensate for the apparent rotation destabilizes posture and gaze and induces nausea. Fortunately, the symptoms occur only transiently. Symmetry of “vestibular tone” tends to become re-established within days and weeks by adaptive mechanisms [48, 50, 51]. Chronic bilateral vestibular loss hardly leads to clinical complaints. However, closer scrutiny may reveal blurred vision during fast self-motion as well as postural instability when standing or walking on soft ground in the absence of a visual or tactile space reference. The impairments may be quantified by electro-­ oculography and posturography, respectively. They witness the importance of the vestibular system for human gaze and body stabilization. Each of the two vestibular transducers comes with a problem. The canal transducer problem arises from the integrations of the input signal (mathematical angular acceleration-to-velocity and velocity-to-position integrations). This processing emphasizes low-frequency components of noise.

Data Acquisition: The Joint Angle Sensor Muscle lengthening during a rotation of a joint leads to a firing increase of sensory endings in muscle receptors called muscle spindles. These spindles make a major contribution to the joint angle and movement sense (“muscle proprioception,” “kinesthesia”). Since the muscle is elastic, however, the sense has to take into account, in addition to muscle length, also force, both in active and passive conditions. The force information appears to stem from transducers in the tendons. With active movements, there also appears to be a contribution from central sources. Furthermore, transducers in the skin and in the joint capsules participate.

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The joint angle sensor makes a major contribution to reactive balancing. This is witnessed by the lean responses that result when spindles of ankle muscles are selectively activated through tendon vibration. Loss of large-diameter sensory nerve fibers stemming from the spindles dramatically degrades postural skills, although the effect may be obscured by visual control or mentally commanded postures.

Data Acquisition: The Force/Torque Sensor Mainly, two transducer types are important, one being the aforementioned GTOs in the tendons. At the other end of the causal chain that links the force produced by the ankle muscles to the ground reaction force are pressure and tension transducers spatially distributed in the foot and its sole. From both transducers, a measure of ankle torque may be derived. It is often held that humans use force cues to maintain the COP within the base of the foot support (a popular notion also in robotics). A “tonic excursion limiter” was identified in vestibular-able and vestibular-loss humans, but vestibular-able subjects appear to use vestibular cues for it. A likely reason why they do not prioritize force cues is that these may become less reliable than vestibular body-space cues when standing or walking on compliant support surfaces.

 ata Acquisition: The Psychophysical Evidence D for Sensor Concept The concept of a vestibular sensor that arises from canal-otolith fusion is based on congruent evidence from psychophysics and. VOR studies. Two intuitive psychophysical observations on canal-otolith interaction are briefly described. First, the self-motion percept during passive whole-­ body rotation in the earth-horizontal plane shows the canals’ decay time constant, whereas it shows static (gravitational) sensitivity in the vertical planes. Second, unusual rapid and lasting horizontal translation, e.g., during aircraft catapult launch on a carrier ship, leads to a body-space tilt illusion, which is a typical feature of the complementary filter fusion method. Also, the concept of a joint angle sensor holds. In summary, canal and otolith transducer signals are fused in the brain, yielding a vestibular sensor that provides 3D information of the head angular velocity, attitude, and translational acceleration in space. Furthermore, sensors of joint angle and angular velocity and of joint torque can be posited. The brain obviously makes an effort to derive from many transducer signals explicit measures of the relevant kinematic and kinetic variables (the same that are used in physics and engineering sciences). This makes it easy to implement human-like technical sensors in humanoids

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for balancing. The vestibular sensor may be mimicked, for example, by combining gyros and accelerometers, the ankle angle sensor by a goniometer, and the ankle torque sensor by force sensors in the “muscle tendons” and/or by compression load cells under the feet.

The Meta Level Concept The psychophysics of human perception of passive self-motion provides information not only on how humans fuse transducer signals to obtain physical variable measures (see above, sensor concept) but also on how these measures are further used (in neuroscience, these aspects are often combined in the term “multisensory integration”). Psychophysics provides here information that, to date, is not directly available from single neuron recordings in animals nor from other electrophysiological or imaging data (psychophysics contributes to make the “black box” system identification approach a “gray box” approach). The psychophysical function principles are applied to reactive sensorimotor control with the argument that, there, basically the same variables are processed as in spatial orientation. This is a plausibility assumption that draws on a mostly valid action-perception congruency. It has been suggested that a neck proprioceptive body-head signal is used to transfer the vestibular space reference from the head to the trunk (to the COM) and further proprioceptive signals to transfer it to the foot (for the foot-space estimate). Another important finding was that conscious self-motion perception combines different sensor signals to reconstruct external stimuli. During passive body rotation on a platform, for example, subjects relate their sensation of self-motion not to the vestibular signal in the head but to the physical stimulus, i.e., to the platform-space motion (and physically correct consider their body motion a consequence of the platform motion). They are not aware of the underlying sensory transformations of the space reference from the vestibular organs in the head via the body to the feet and their support.

Postural Reflex Concept The basic neural feedback loop from a sensor via the spinal cord back to a muscle may clinically be tested using muscle stretch (muscle stretch reflex), for example, in the form of the Achilles tendon tapping reflex. The reflex tends to be weakened with impaired nerve conduction or spinal transmission. An “exaggerated” reflex response may result from lesions of higher control centers (“release from inhibition” effect). The reflex is involuntary and stereotype and occasionally referred to as a “short latency reflex” (latency -20–80 ms). It may represent the early part of a more complex response, where the later parts, involving ascending loops in the spinal cord and brain, are called median-latency and long-latency reflexes. These arise in a

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context-dependent way. The stretch reflex uses the joint angle sensor and stabilizes a given desired segment (link) position. A local version of it is the neck-spinal (or cervico-spinal) reflex. These proprioceptive intersegmental reflexes together with vestibulo-spinal reflexes represent the basis of the involuntary and stereotypical postural stabilizations that one may observe in newborn babies, brain-injured human adults, and so-called reduced animal preparations (in which higher brain functions are eliminated). In this classical postural reflex concept, reflex chains are assumed to explain more complex (multi-segmental) stabilizations, such as the righting of a body from a horizontal to a vertical posture after falling down. It is suggested that all movements build in some way on reflexes that serve as a kind of motor primitives. In intact and mature individuals, postural reflexes do not stand out anymore. They appear to be hidden (integrated) in more complex mechanisms that took over during childhood sensorimotor development with training and maturation of neural pathways and centers. But they may re-emerge in the adult upon large brain lesions.

Posture-Movement Problem In traditional reflex physiology, it was often assumed that the postural reflexes stabilize postures that, per definition, are static. It was believed that the reflexes would have to be suppressed during voluntary movements, so as not to hinder them. A modern view would be that not only static postures but also movements require stabilization against unforeseen or foreseen external disturbances. Another concern was that the sensory inflow arising upon voluntary movement interferes with the sensory inflow that evokes the postural reflexes. These issues are still debated to date. There were several suggestions of how to solve the problems, some being still influential to date. One suggestion was that, instead of reflex inhibition, reflex interactions might do the job. The example considered was an interaction of the vestibulo-­ spinal and cervico-spinal reflexes. Each of them tries to stabilize the body when evoked in isolation (vestibular: whole body rotation; neck: trunk-only rotation). But when combined during head rotation, they are opposite in sign and tend to cancel each other. Therefore, so it was held, head movements can occur unhindered and furthermore do not endanger body stability. The flaw of this hypothesis is that the reflexes would still hinder active body movements. The idea of vestibular-proprioceptive interaction, however, is still present in the meta-level concept. In primates and humans, meta-level concept is commonly applied in models of the visuo-oculomotor system, where eye muscle proprioception appears to play no considerable role and the eyeball mechanics and motor control are relatively simple (e.g., gravity can remain unconsidered). Concerning the human skeleton-motor system, evidence is still sparse and speculative, at least as concerns the efference copy of the motor command signal. In engineering, this is often used as a constituent of

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Fig. 1.31  The brain: cerebral cortex

Fig. 1.32  The brain major internal structures

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observer models. In contrast, the disturbance prediction and anticipation mechanism of the meta-level concept draws on the desired movement signal and on stored contextual information of external disturbances.

The Nervous System (CNS, PNS) The Brain (Cerebral Cortex) The cerebral cortex, as illustrated in Fig.  1.31, constitutes the outer gray matter layer that completely covers the surface of the two cerebral hemispheres. This part of the brain is divided into four sections: the occipital lobe, the temporal lobe, the parietal lobe, and the frontal lobe [53, 54]. Functions, such as vision, hearing, and speech, are distributed in selected regions. Some regions are associated with more than one function, Fig. 1.32. The forebrain is credited with the highest intellectual function, for example, thinking, planning, and problem-solving. The hippocampus is involved in memory [45, 51, 53, 54]. The thalamus serves as a relay station for almost all of the information coming into the brain. Neurons in the hypothalamus serve as relay stations for internal regulatory systems by monitoring information coming in from the autonomic nervous system and commanding the body through those nerves and pituitary gland. On the upper surface of the midbrain are two pairs of small hills called colliculi, collections of cells that relay specific sensory information from the sense organs to the brain. The hindbrain consists of the pons and medulla oblongata, which help control respiration and heart rhythms, and the cerebellum, which helps control movement as well as cognitive processes that require precise timing [53, 54].

Spinal Cord and Nerves The spinal cord constitutes a long, tube-like band of tissue, Fig. 1.33. It connects the brain to the lower back. It carries nerve signals from the brain to the body and vice versa. These nerve signals help in sensations and also move the body. Any damage to the spinal cord may affect the movement of function. The mature central nervous system (CNS) consists of the brain and spinal cord [53, 54]. The brain sends nerve signals to specific parts of the body through peripheral nerves, known as the peripheral nervous system (PNS). Peripheral nerves in the cervical region serve the neck and arms; those in the thoracic region serve the trunk; those in the lumbar region serve the legs; and those in the sacral region serve the bowels and bladder. The PNS consists of the somatic nervous system that connects

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Fig. 1.33  The spinal cord and nerves

voluntary skeletal muscles with cells specialized to respond to sensations such as touch and pain. The autonomic nervous system is made of neurons connecting the CNS with internal organs [53, 54]. It is divided into the sympathetic nervous system, which mobilizes energy and resources during times of stress and arousal, and the parasympathetic nervous system, which conserves energy and resources during relaxed states.

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1  The Human Locomotor System: Physiological and Technological Foundations Cerebral Cortex and Associated Areas Motor Cortex

Basal Ganglia

Sensory Cortex

Vision

Thalamus

Brain Stem (MLR) (PPN)

Cerebellum Vestibular

Spinal Cord CPG

DTF, VTF

Joint & Muscle

Input Signal Output Signal Muscle Contraction & Movement

Sensory Receptors

Feedback Signal

Fig. 1.34  Principle of the motor system of the human body

The Motor System of the Human Body This section seeks to describe the process of intention in the brain or reflex that elucidates the flow of neural information in the human body, resulting in locomotion. Figure  1.34 illustrates the principle underlying the motor system of the human body. The motor system of the human body is responsible for converting neural signals into physical energy. A thought or intention initiates a motion. Furthermore, both conscious brain activity and inputs from the sensor system of the human body may be able to initiate movements. Reflexes cause the conversion of physical energy into neural signals, which in turn stimulate muscles without going through the brain. According to neurophysiology, movements may be viewed in three categories depending on the influence of voluntary control. The categories include: Reflex responses are the simplest form of motor behavior. Examples include the withdrawal of the hand from a hot object, the knee jerk, or swallowing. Reflexes are rapid, stereotyped responses and can be performed without any voluntary control, although they can be modified with conscious effort. Rhythmic motor patterns are typically initiated and terminated voluntarily, but in-­ between no conscious effort to maintain repetitive movement is necessary, although it can adapt to certain circumstances. Some examples of this type of movement include walking, running, or swimming.

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Voluntary movements are the most complex movements that include activities like playing an instrument and driving a car. Those movements are goal-directed and can be improved with practice. The better those movements have been learned, the less conscious effort they require. According to the different levels of voluntary influence on a movement, the human motor system can be divided into three levels of motor control, as illustrated in Fig. 1.34, the spinal cord, the brain stem, and the motor cortex. The motor areas of the cerebral cortex are responsible for complex voluntary movements, passing control signals to the lower levels of the hierarchy, the brain stem, and the spinal cord. The rhythmic movement patterns and reflex responses are generated, which can be modulated from the higher levels through the parallel pathways. The cerebellum is responsible for correcting the current movement to resemble the desired movement. These levels are hierarchically organized and in parallel with the spinal cord being the lowest level. The reflexes and the rhythmic motor patterns have local circuits, which are optimized for quick responses. The spinal cord: Neurophysiology reports that human locomotion may be generated by a rhythm-generating neuronal network in the spinal cord. This rhythm-­ generating neuronal network is known as the central pattern generator (CPG). The locomotion is evoked by stimulus input from the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) within the brainstem. However, the adaptive locomotion may not be generated solely by the rhythmic signals produced by the CPG, but also the information from the afferent proprioception is equally essential [48, 51]. Hence, the afferent proprioceptive information may be necessary to be mutually coordinated in the spinal cord toward the construction of appropriate coordination of the intra- and inter-limb. Furthermore, the spinocerebellar neurons depict that the sensory feedback signals from proprioceptors in the muscles and joints may be integrated in the spinal circuitry in order to encode global parameters of the limb movement, such as the orientation and length of the axis connecting the most proximal joint and distal position of a limb (limb axis). This implies that the global parameters describing limb kinematics, along with individual local proprioceptive inputs, are actually utilized as important sensory inputs for locomotion [46]. In addition, muscle activation pattern is also suggested to be generated primarily based on global kinematic parameters. The central pattern generators (CPG) have been generally hypothesized to be an oscillator that generates the orientation and length of the corresponding limb axis, and the spinal circuitry of interneurons somehow generate muscle activation patterns based on the output signal of the CPG. The brain stem consists of the medulla oblongata, pons, and midbrain, which connect the cerebrum and cerebellum with the spinal cord. The medulla oblongata is the most caudal part of the brain stem. Its ventral surface rests upon the basilar

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portion of the occipital bone, while its dorsal surface is, in large part, covered by the cerebellum. The pons interposes between the midbrain and the medulla oblongata and is characterized by the huge ventral swelling. It is covered by the cerebellum dorsally. The midbrain is the shortest brain stem segment. It connects the pons and cerebellum with the cerebrum. The ventral surface of the midbrain is a pair of longitudinal columns of nerve fibers, the cerebral peduncles [45, 47, 48]. The internal structure of the brain stem comprises the cranial nerve nuclei, non-­ cranial nerve nuclei, as ascending and descending pathways, and reticular formation. Almost all the cranial nerve nuclei are located in the brain stem except the nuclei of the olfactory and optic nerves; they are evaginations of the brain itself. The non-cranial nerve nuclei involve (1) the nucleus gracile and nucleus cuneate, (2) inferior olivary nuclear complex, (3) superior olivary nucleus, (4) pontine nuclei, (5) nucleus ceruleus, (6) inferior colliculus, (7) superior colliculus, (8) red nucleus, (9) substantia nigra, and (10) pretectal area. The long ascending pathways consist of (i) medial lemniscus, (ii) spinothalamic lemniscus, (iii) lateral lemniscus, (iv) trigeminal lemniscus, and (v) medial longitudinal fasciculus. The axons of the spinal and pontine nuclei of the trigeminal nerve successively cross the median plane to form the trigeminal lemniscus, which conducts the tactile, pressure, pain, and thermal impulses, ascending with the medial lemniscus to the thalamus and terminating in the ventral posterolateral nucleus of the thalamus [47, 48]. The long descending pathways consist of i) the pyramidal tract and ii) tectospinal tract. The pyramidal tract includes the corticospinal tract and the corticonuclear tract. Both continue downwards from the cerebral peduncle, entering the basilar part of the pons. They become dispersed into numerous smaller bundles from a compact collection of fibers, separated from one another by the pontine nuclei and transverse fibers of the pons. The corticonuclear tract terminates successively in the motor nuclei of the cranial nerve located in the brain stem. The corticospinal tract descends through the whole length of the pons and enters the pyramids of the medulla oblongata, where they converge into compact tracts again. In the lower part of the pyramid, about three-quarters of the nerve fibers cross the median plane and continue down the spinal cord in the lateral funiculus as the lateral corticospinal tract. The uncrossed fibers retain their ventromedial position and descend in the anterior funiculus of the spinal cord as the anterior corticospinal tract [44, 45, 54]. The tectospinal tract arises from the tectum of the midbrain, descends on the ventral to the medial longitudinal fasciculus, passing through the pons and medulla oblongata to end in the anterior gray column of the spinal cord. The reticular formation of the brain stem has long been recognized that outside the more conspicuous fiber bundles and nuclei of the brain stem, there is an extensive field of intermingled gray and white matter collectively termed the reticular formation. According to the traditional view, the reticular formation forms the

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central core throughout the brain stem; it appears in the upper cervical cord, lying laterally between posterior and anterior horns; in the medulla oblongata, it lies among the olivary nucleus, inferior cerebellar peduncle, floor of the fourth ventricle, and medial lemniscus; in the pons and midbrain, it fills most of the tegmentum, embedding various nuclei and tracts. The fibers contributing to the reticular formation interlace each other to form a widespread network. The neurons contributing to the reticular formation can make up nuclei, such as the rapheal nuclei throughout the brain stem, the lateral reticular nucleus and gigantocellular reticular nucleus of the medulla oblongata, the rostral and caudal pontine reticular nuclei of the pons, and the mesencephalic reticular nucleus, etc. The afferent projections of the reticular formation are (1) the direct corticoreticular fibers and the collaterals of the corticospinal tract, (2) the spinoreticular fibers and the collaterals of the long ascending tracts, such as the lemnisci, the vagal pathway, and the optic pathway via the tectoreticular fibers, and (3) the fibers deriving directly or indirectly from the diencephalon to the corpus striatum [46–48]. The efferent connections of the reticular formation are (1) the reticulospinal fibers to the spinal autonomic and locomotor control centers, (2) by short descending pathways to sensory and locomotor nuclei of the cranial nerves, and (3) ascending reticular fibers to the nonspecific nuclei of the diencephalon and through to the corpus striatum and to the cerebral cortex, including most regions of neocortex and many areas of the limbic system. The reticular formation is an important integration center for the vital activity. Its major functions may sum up as follows: 1. Somatic motor control: The reticular formation exerts controlling influences on activity patterns of the skeletal muscles ranging from relatively simple reflex loops, coarse to fine locomotion and to complicated patterns associated with emotional expression, involving the complexities of speech, gestures, and fluctuations of facial expression. 2. Activation of the behavioral arousal is essential for the maintenance of the conscious state of the cerebral cortex. In human, lesion of the brain stem, which results in damages to the reticular formation, often produces disturbances of consciousness that range from fleeting unconsciousness to deep and sustained coma. 3. Visceromotor control: The cardiovascular readjustments and the activity of nonstriated muscles and many glandular cells in the thoracicoabdominal viscera are, in most cases, under the controlling influences of postganglionic autonomic neurons. Their preganglionic neuronal somata and dendrite are either directly, or through the intermediary of local interneurons, partially controlled by reticulobulbar and descending reticulospinal fibers. Based mainly on the physiological investigations, a series of vital functional centers such as the “cardiovascular controlling center,” “respiratory center,” “vomiting center,” etc. have been established. The brain stem is the next level of control and is subdivided into two parts, notably the medial systems, which are mainly responsible for the control of the body

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posture through the integration of information from the eyes and the balance system, and the lateral systems that are connected to the distal muscles of the limbs, such as the arms and hands, in order to control goal-directed movements [44–46]. The neuronal mechanisms that control the body posture play a very significant role toward the generation of robust locomotion. Basically, the body orientation and force equilibrium are controlled by tone in the limb muscles, and this tone is regulated by the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPN) in the brainstem through the dorsal tegmental field (DTF) and ventral tegmental field (VTF). This tone system may utilize the global kinematic parameters for control. The combination of the DTF/VTF encodes the degree of stiffness of the limb axis, and the spinal circuitry of the interneurons generates the muscle activation patterns according to its activity. Both the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPN) and the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) receive inputs from the basal ganglia to integrate the posture and the locomotion and to initiate and terminate locomotion in a coordinated manner. The cerebellum also seems to play a crucial role in this process, as this region is where multi-modal sensory information from the vestibular organ (VO), proprioceptors, and exteroceptors is integrated. Therefore, integrated control of the posture and locomotion in the basal ganglia-brainstem-cerebello-spinal system is envisaged as providing the basis of adaptive locomotion. The cerebellum is the second-largest portion of the brain and occupies the inferior and posterior aspects of the cranial cavity. Specifically, it is posterior to the medulla and pons and inferior to the occipital lobes of the cerebrum. It is separated from the cerebrum by the transverse fissure and by an extension of the cranial dura mater called the tentorium cerebelli, which supports the occipital lobes of the cerebral hemispheres. The cerebellum has two so-called cerebellar hemispheres joined by a sagittal, transversely narrow median vermis [42, 48, 54]. The cerebellar surface is called the cortex, which is separated into numerous curved, transverse fissures, giving it a laminated appearance and separating its folia. Consists of gray matter in a series of slender, parallel ridges called folia. Beneath the gray matter are white matter tracts that resemble the branches of a tree. Deep within the white matter are masses of gray matter, which are called the cerebellar nuclei or central nuclei. The cerebellum is attached to the brain stem by three paired bundles of fibers (tracts) called inferior, middle, and superior cerebellar peduncles. 1. Lobes of the cerebellum: The cerebellum can be primarily divided into a flocculonodular lobe and the corpus cerebelli, the latter having anterior and posterior lobe: (1) The flocculonodular lobe is predominantly vestibular in its connections and constitutes the oldest part of the cerebellum, so it is called the vestibulocerebellum or archicerebellum; (2) The anterior lobe and the rostral part of the inferior vermis are predominantly spinocerebellar in its connections and is phylogenetically the next part to appear, so it is also called the spinocerebellum or

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paleocerebellum; (3) The posterior lobe is predominantly corticopontocerebellar in its connections and constitutes the pontocerebellum or neocerebellum [48, 54]. 2. Cerebellar cortex: The cerebellar cortex is uniformly structured in all parts, and three layers are evident in histologic sections. From the surface to the white matter of the folium, these are the molecular layer, the Purkinje cell layer, and the granular layer. There are two types of afferent fibers in the cortex. Mossy fibers terminate in synaptic contact with cells of the granular layer, through which they affect Purkinje cells, whereas climbing fibers enter the molecular layer and wind around the dendrites of Purkinje cells. The only fibers leaving the cortex are axons of Purkinje cells; these fibers terminate in central nuclei of the cerebellum, with the exception of some fibers from the cortex of the flocculonodular lobe that proceed to the brain stem. 3 . Central nuclei of cerebellum: Three gray masses are embedded in the cerebellar white core on each side. Most lateral and largest is the nucleus dentatus, medial to which are the smaller nuclei emboliformis and globosus, the most medial being the nucleus fastigial from which most fibers run directly to the brain stem through the inferior cerebellar peduncle, ending in the vestibular nuclei of both sides and in the reticular formation of the medulla oblongata. The dentate nucleus is the largest one and lies most laterally, which receives the fibers from the cerebellar cortex.

Important Functions of the Cerebellum Functionally, the cerebellum is an area of the brain concerned with coordinating subconscious contractions of skeletal muscles (the cerebellar peduncles are the fiber tracts that channel information into and out of the cerebellum). The cerebellum constantly receives input signals from proprioceptors in muscles, tendons, and joints, receptors for equilibrium, and visual receptors of the eyes. Such input permits the cerebellum to collect information on the physical status of the body with regard to posture, equilibrium, and all movements at joints. In addition, when other motor areas of the brain, such as the motor cortex of the cerebrum and basal nuclei, send signals to skeletal muscles, they also send a duplicate set of signals to the cerebellum. The cerebellum compares this input information regarding the actual status of the body with the intended movement determined by motor areas of the brain (cerebrum and basal ganglia). If the intent of these motor areas is not being attained by the skeletal muscles, the cerebellum detects the variation and sends feedback signals to the motor areas, either to stimulate or inhibit the activity of the skeletal muscles. This interaction produces smooth, coordinated movements of our body’s skeletal muscles [46–48]. The cerebellum also functions in maintaining equilibrium and controlling posture, for example, receptors for equilibrium send nerve impulses to the cerebellum, informing it of body position. When the direction of movement changes, the cerebellum sends corrective signals to the motor cortex of the cerebrum. The motor

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cortex then sends signals over motor tracts to somatic motor neurons to skeletal muscles to reposition the body. Another function of the cerebellum is related to predicting the future position of a body part during a particular movement. Just before moving a part of the body to reach its intended position, the cerebellum sends signals over motor tracts to somatic motor neurons to the skeletal muscles to slow the moving part and stop it at a specific point. This function of the cerebellum is used in actions such as walking. There is some evidence that the cerebellum may play a role in a person’s emotional development, modulating sensations of anger and pleasure and allowing normal emotional expression and interpretation.

The Motor Cortex It is the highest level of control with the highest layer of abstraction. It is responsible for coordinating and planning complex movements. To perform this, it is connected to the cerebellum and also to the basal ganglia. During a voluntary movement, the cerebellum compares the actual movement through responses from the sensory systems to the desired movement and corrects the movement if necessary. The output to the cerebral cortex is excitatory, initiating movements [47, 49, 50]. The basal ganglia, on the other hand, works inhibitory on the cerebral cortex, suppressing certain movements to allow others to be performed. The basal ganglia and the cerebellum are connected to the motor cortex via the thalamus, a relay station. The hierarchical structure of the control system ensures that simpler movements can be performed without conscious effort. But through the additional parallel neural pathways, it is possible for higher levels to modulate lower levels to adapt the movement to special circumstances, for example, changing the stride length or stepping over an obstacle. In addition to the neural commands from the higher levels, every level is fed with sensory information that is needed for appropriate control. There is a permanent flow of information about the position and orientation of the body limbs, the degree of muscle contraction, and the information about events in the environment through the skin or eyes. All pathways from the different control levels are connected in complex networks of interneurons in the spinal cord. They are ultimately converging into common pathways that lead to the motor neurons, which innervate the muscles. Those motor neurons are situated in the spinal cord and connect to the skeletal muscles by axons (nerve fibers). The signals (action potentials) sent over the axons to the muscles lead to contraction of muscle fibers, shortening the muscle. Since every muscle is connected to the human skeleton at least at two points spanning one or more joints, the shortening of

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Fig. 1.35  Illustrating the brain-body-­environment system

Internal Dynamics Central Nervous System

Human Body

Motor Output

Sensory Input Environment

External Dynamics

Cerebral Cortex and Associated Areas Motor Cortex

Basal Ganglia

Sensory Cortex

Vision

Thalamus

Brain Stem (MLR) (PPN)

Cerebellum Vestibular

Spinal Cord CPG

DTF, VTF

Joint & Muscle

Input Signal Output Signal Muscle Contraction & Movement

Sensory Receptors

Feedback Signal

Fig. 1.36  Concept of neuromechanics in the locomotor system

the muscle creates a torque in those joints. If the torque is large enough, a motion is performed.

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Motor Aspects of the Human Locomotor System Motor control system consists of the body, the central nervous system, and the environment. The body includes a large number of sensors and actuators and connects the brain with the environment. The interaction between the body and the environment imposes some constraints on the redundant degrees of freedom in the total dynamical system [2, 5, 6]. The body and the environment constitute the controlled object and build up the external dynamics to the brain, whereas the connection of the body with the brain builds up the internal dynamics, respectively, Fig. 1.35. For the neurodynamics of the human locomotor system, it becomes essential to understand how muscles, sense organs, and the central nervous system interact to produce coordinated, dynamically stable movement under steady conditions, as well as when humans negotiate complex terrain and experience unexpected perturbations, Fig.  1.36. Coordinated movement emerges from the interplay among descending output from the central nervous system, sensory input from the body and environment, muscle dynamics, and the emergent dynamics of the whole musculoskeletal system [2, 5, 51]. Fundamentally, motor control involves a series of transformations of information from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles, then to the body, and back to the brain. The body may be taken as a stack of superimposed segments, again with a kinematic hierarchy, in that each lower segment tends to transfer its motion to all superimposed ones. The kinematic signals in the multi-­ segmented system, Fig. 1.37, and the related kinetic signals would represent global variables for sensorimotor control in that they can be used to produce a given

Space

HEAD

TRUNK

LEGS

FEET Body Support

Fig. 1.37  Multisegmented musculoskeletal system

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reaction in one or the other inter-segmental joint, for example, a head-in-space movement in the neck, hip, or leg joints. Through the fusion of multiple sensor sources, the internal reconstruction of the physical links between the references may be established [5]. The control of both the perceptual and the motor aspects of the spatial behavior takes place in one common kinematic reference system. This envisaged reference system represents a rather faithful internal reconstruction of physics (that is, of the kinematic aspects of mechanics). The system is hierarchically structured, consisting of linked references that are anchored in gravito-inertial space. The perceptual notion of space is derived mainly through vestibular sensors. The internal kinematic reference system represents a reconstruction of physics, with a gravitational anchoring of head on trunk on legs (shank and thigh) on feet support in space. Bipedal locomotion involves the body movement carried out by cyclical and dynamical interactions of the legs with the ground. During the bipedal locomotion in the real world, the body will receive unpredictable forces, depending on various factors, e.g., changes of the ground conditions, changes of the wind conditions, etc. Perturbations to the environment caused by these external forces depend on the condition of the system itself, that is, the dynamical properties of the body. For example, the body posture will be directly affected by the external forces if the body stiffness is high and will be less affected if it is low [5, 49, 50]. Muscle tone is one of the important parameters to determine the body properties such as the stiffness and viscosity. Recent physiological studies have revealed that the appropriate setting of the muscle tone before and during movements is essentially important for carrying out various movements, including locomotion.

References 1. Hausdirff, J. M. (2005). Gait variability: Methods, modeling and meaning. Journal of Neuro Engineering and Rehabilitation, 2, 19. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-­0003-­2-­19 2. Mergner, T. (2002). The Matryoshka dolls principle in human dynamic behavior in space: A theory of linked references for multisensory perception and control of action. Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive/Current Psychology of Cognition, 21(2–3), 129–212. 3. Karduna, A.  R. (2003). Introduction to Biomechanical Analysis. In Carol Oaths (Eds.), Kinesiology: Mechanics and pathomechanics of human motion. Lippincott Williams and Wilkens, 1st edition 2003, 2nd edition 2009. 4. Fleischer, C. (2007). Controlling exoskeletons with EMG signals and a biomechanical body model. PhD Dissertation, Fakultaet IV: Elektrotechnik und Informatik, Technische Universitaet Berlin. 5. Sarkodie-Gyan, T., Huiying, Y., Bogale, M., Hernandez, N.  V., & Pirela-Cruz, M. (2017). Application of multiple sensor data fusion for the analysis of human dynamic behavior inspace: Assessment and evaluation of mobility-related functional impairments. Journal of Biomedical Science and Engineering, 10, 182–203.

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6. La Scaleia, V., et al. (2018). Early manifestation of arm-leg coordination during stepping on a surface in human neonates (Experimental brain research). Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. 7. Pandis, P. (2013). Musculoskeletal biomechanics of the shoulder in functional activities. PhD Dissertation, Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London. 8. Catarina de Sousa e Silva. (2020). Biomechanical study of the shoulder joint complex and associated injuries. MS Degree in Biomedical Engineering, Universidade do Porto. 9. Eschweiler, J., Li, J., Quack, V., Rath, B., Baroncono, A., Hildebrand, F., & Migliorini, F. (2022). Anatomy, biomechanics, and loads of the wrist joint. MDPI Life. https://mdpi.com/ journal/life 10. Harris, M.  D. (2013). The geometry and biomechanics of normal and pathomorphologic human hips. PhD Dissertation, The University of Utah. 11. Uhlmann, K. (1996). Lehrbuch der Anatomie des Bewegungsapparates. UTB für Wissenschaft. 12. Gordon, A. M., Huxley, A. F., & Julian, F. J. (1966). The variation in isometric tension with sarcomere length in vertebrate muscle fibres. The Journal of Physiology, 184(1), 170–192. 13. Delp, S. L., Loan, J. P., Hoy, M. G., Zajac, F. E., Topp, E. L., & Rosen, J. M. (1990). An interactive graphics-based model of the lower extremity to study orthopaedic surgical procedures. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 37(8), 757–767. 14. Buchanan, T. S., Lloyd, D. G., Manal, K., & Besier, T. F. (2004). Neuromusculoskeletal modeling: Estimation of muscle forces and joint moments and movements from measurements of neural command. Journal of Applied Biomechanics, 20, 367–395. 15. Zajac, F. E. (1989). Muscle and tendon: Properties, models, scaling, and application to biomechanics and motor control. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 17(4), 359–411. 16. Basmajian, J.  V., & De Luca, C.  J. (1985). Muscles alive: Their functions revealed by Electromyogr. Williams & Wilkins. 17. Kandel, E.  R., Schwartz, J.  H., Jessell, T.  M., et  al. (1995). Essentials of neural science & behavior. Appleton & Lange. 18. Menon, D.  K., & Veenith, T. (2012, November). The cerebral circulation. https://doi. org/10.13140/2.1.1186.2405. 19. Sokoloff, L., Field, J., Magoun, H., Hall, V., et al. (1960). The metabolism of the central nervous system in vivo. In Handbook of physiology. Section I, neurophysiology (pp. 1843–1864). American Physiological Society. 20. Hamill, J., Knutzen, K. M., & Derrick, T. R. (2015). Biomechanical basis of human movement (4th ed.). Copyright: 2015, 2009, 2003, 1995 Lippincott Williams & Wilkens, a Wolters Kluwer business. 21. Hausdorff, J.  M., Ashkenazy, Y., Peng, C.  K., Ivanov, P.  C., Stanley, H.  E., & Goldberg, A. L. (2001). When human walking becomes random walking: Fractal analysis and modeling of gait rhythm fluctuations. Elsevier Physica A, 302, 138–147. 22. Hausdorff, J. M., Purdon, P. L., Peng, C.-K., Ladin, Z., Wei, J. Y., & Goldberg, A. L. (1996). Fractal dynamics of human gait: Stability of long-range correlations in stride interval fluctuations. American Physiological Society. 23. Hausdorff, J.  M. (2007, August). Gait dynamics, fractals and falls: Finding meaning in the stride-to-stride fluctuations of human walking. Human Movement Science, 26(4), 555–589. NIH Public Access. 24. Murphy, J., Brewer, R., Catmur, C., & Bird, G. (2017). Interoception and psychopathology: A developmental neuroscience perspective. Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, 23, 45–56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2016.12.006 25. Craig, A. D. (2002). How do you feel? Interoception: The sense of the physiological condition of the body. Nature Reviews. Neuroscience, 3(8), 655–666. 26. Damasio, A., Damasio, H., & Tranel, D. (2012). Persistence of feelings and sentience after bilateral damage of the insula. Cereb, Cortex bhs077. 27. Feinstein, J. S., Khalsa, S. S., Salomons, T. V., Prkachin, K. M., Frey-Law, L. A., Lee, J. E., Tranel, D., & Rudrauf, D. (2016). Preserved emotional awareness of pain in a patient with extensive bilateral damage to the insula, anterior cingulate, and amygdala. Brain Structure & Function, 221(3), 1499–1511.

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28. Pollatos, O., & Schandry, R. (2008). Emotional processing and emotional memory are modulated by interoceptive awareness. Cognition and Emotion, 22(2), 272–287. 29. Werner, N. S., Jung, K., Duschek, S., & Schandry, R. (2009). Enhanced cardiac perception is associated with benefits in decision-making. Psychophysiology, 46(6), 1123–1129. 30. Wang, L., Ma, L., Yang, J., & Wu, J. (2021). Human somatosensory processing and artificial Somatosensation. Review Article, AAAS, Cyborg and Bionic Systems, 2021, Article ID 9843259. 31. Vallbo, A. B., & Johansson, R. S. (1984). Properties of cutaneous mechanoreceptors in the human hand related to touch sensation. Human Neurobiology, 3(1), 3–14. 32. Hayward, V. (2018). Chapter 3: A brief overview of the human somatosensory system. In Sorbonne Universites, Universite Pierre et Marie Curie. Institut des Systemes Intelligents et de Robotique. 33. Hayward, V. (2011). Is there a plenhaptic function? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 366(1581), 3115–3122. 34. Terekhov, A. V., & Hayward, V. (2015). The brain uses extrasomatic information to estimate limb displacement. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 282, 166. 35. Dietz, V. (2002). Proprioception and locomotor disorders. Nature Reviews. Neuroscience, 3, 781–790. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn939 36. Proske, U., & Gandevia, S.  C. (2012). “The proprioceptive senses: Their roles in signaling body shape, body position and movement, and muscle force,” Department of Physiology, Monash University, Victoria, Australia, and Neuroscience Research Australia and University of New South Wales, Sydney. Australia Physiological Reviews, 92(4), 1651–1697. 37. Adrian, E. D., & Umrath, K. (1929). The impulse discharge from the pacinian corpuscle. The Journal of Physiology, 68, 139–154. 38. Grigg, P. (1994). Peripheral neural mechanisms in proprioception. Journal of Sport Rehabilitation, 3, 2–17. 39. Banks, R. W., Hulliger, M., Saed, H. H., & Stacey, M. J. (2009). A comparative analysis of the encapsulated end-organs of mammalian skeletal muscles and of their sensory nerve endings. Journal of Anatomy, 214, 859–887. 40. Clark, F. J., Grigg, P., & Chapin, J. W. (1989). The contribution of articular receptors to proprioception with the fingers in humans. Journal of Neurophysiology, 61, 186–193. 41. Ferrell, W. R., Gandevia, S. C., & McCloskey, D. I. (1987). The role of joint receptors in human kinaesthesia when intramuscular receptors cannot contribute. The Journal of Physiology, 386, 63–71. 42. Landgren, S., & Silfvenius, H. (1969). Projection to cerebral cortex of group I muscle afferents from the cat’s hind limb. The Journal of Physiology, 200, 353–372. 43. McIntyre, A. K. (1974). Central actions of impulses in muscle afferent fibres. In C. C. Hunt (Ed.), Handbook of sensory physiology: Muscle receptors (pp. 235–288). Springer. 44. McIntyre, A. K., Proske, U., & Rawson, J. A. (1984). Cortical projection of afferent information from tendon organs in the cat. The Journal of Physiology, 354, 395–406. 45. Oscarsson, O., & Rosen, I. (1963). Projection to cerebral cortex of large muscle-spindle afferents in forelimb nerves of the cat. The Journal of Physiology, 169, 924–945. 46. Bosco, G., & Poppele, R.  E. (2001). Proprioception from a spinocerebellar perspective. Physiological Reviews, 81, 539–568. 47. Landgren, S., Silfvenius, H., & Nucleus, Z. (1971). The medullary relay in the projection path to the cerebral cortex of group I muscle afferents from the cat’s hind limb. The Journal of Physiology, 218, 551–571. 48. Rosen, I. (1969). Afferent connexions to group I activated cells in the main cuneate nucleus of the cat. The Journal of Physiology, 205, 209–236. 49. Mergner, T. (2010). A neurological view on reactive human stance control. Elsevier Journal Annual Reviews in Control, 34, 177–198.

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50. Mergner, T., Maurer, C., & Schweigart, G. (2007). Sensorimotor control of human dynamic behavior in space implemented into a hominoid robot. Neurocenter, University of Freiburg, Germany. A research Project sponsored by the German Research Foundations (DFG) Me 715/5-3, 715/6-1. 51. Nishikawa, K., Biewener, A. A., Aerts, P., Ahn, A. N., Chiel, H. J., Daley, M. A., Daniel, T. L., Full, R. J., Hale, M. E., Hedrick, T. L., Kristopher Lappin, A., Richard Nichols, T., Quinn, R.  D., Satterlie, R.  A., & Szymik, B. (2006). “Neuromechanics: An integrative approach for understanding motor control,” From the symposium “Biomechanics and Neuromuscular Control” presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, January 4–8, 2006, at Orlando, Florida. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 47(1), 16–54. https://doi.org/10.1093/ich/icm024 52. Craig, A. (2003, June). A new view of pain as a homeostatic emotion. Trends in Neurosciences, 26(6), 303–307. 53. Sarkodie-Gyan, T. (2005). Neurorehabilitation devices: Engineering design, measurement and control. McGraw-Hill Publishing. 54. Brain Facts: A Primer on the Brain and nervous system; The Society for Neuroscience, 4th edition, January 2002. ISBN-13: 978-0916-110000.

Suggested Reading van der Kooij, H., Koopman, B., & van der Helm, F. C. T. (2008). Human motion control. Delft University/Twente University.

Chapter 2

Significance in the Understanding of the Human Locomotor System

Introduction The locomotor system is an organ system that gives humans the ability to move using the muscular and skeletal systems. Its primary functions include supporting the body, allowing motion, and protecting vital organs. The bones of the skeletal system provide stability to the body. The locomotor system is an essential component of human health. In addition to providing the body with structure and the means for movement, the musculoskeletal system acts as endocrine system, stimulated by exercise, interacting through biochemical signaling with other organs in the body [1]. As people age, they face new challenges in maintaining musculoskeletal health because the interactions between muscle and bone are complicated by the ageing process. As the population ages, the conditions of sarcopenia, osteoporosis, and arthritis will increase, as will hip and knee replacements. Musculoskeletal disorders are the leading cause of disability worldwide, with enormous impact on quality of life and longevity. They encompass a broad range of conditions that impair normal activity due to injury, pain, or disease of the bones, joints, ligaments, muscles, and tendons. Many of these disorders are associated with or made more complex by the ageing process [1]. The main significance of the human locomotor system is to better understand the underlying and fundamental sciences in order to be able to improve the care and treatment of these disorders [3].

© The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 T. Sarkodie-Gyan, H. Yu, The Human Locomotor System, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32781-0_2

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The Human Locomotor System The locomotor system includes bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, and soft tissues that provide our body with movement, stability, shape, and support. It is an organ system that gives humans the ability to move using their muscular and skeletal systems. The muscular system includes all types of muscles in the body. In particular, skeletal muscles are the ones that act on the body joints to produce movements. The muscular system contains the tendons, which attach the muscles to the bones. Figure 2.1 illustrates the human locomotor system as a feedback control system in which a (position) or set point is generated within the central nervous system (CNS). This set point is compared with the actual position of the limb, and the CNS will send a neural signal to the muscles. The muscles exert forces on the bones of the skeletal system, which will start moving if it is not constrained by the environment [12]. Notably, the interaction between the body and environment imposes some constraints on the redundant degrees of freedom in the total dynamical system. The movements are detected by the sensors, which are all over the body, in the muscles, joints, and skin, as well as the visual and vestibular systems. The sensory receptors in the muscles, joints, and in the skin provide the brain with essential information about the position and motion of the body and limbs. Using these sensory signals, the actual position of the skeletal system may be reconstructed. The coordinated and/or adaptive mobility behaviors inherent in this locomotor system are a result of the intelligent sensory-motor functions inherent in the musculoskeletal system. The interactions within the musculoskeletal system exhibit the tendency to regulate of its internal environment while maintaining a constant and stable condition. This regulatory process is known as homeostasis. It constitutes the attempt of the body to maintain a stable and constant internal environment through constant monitoring and adjustments of the human physiological system [6, 7]. The skeletal and muscular systems work hand-in-hand in the process of homeostatic regulation in a combined system otherwise known as the muscular-skeletal system (or the musculoskeletal system).

Volition

Central Nervous System

Body Segments Limbs/Joints

Muscles

Feedback Control System Sensors

Proprioception

Visual

Vestibular

Feedback Sensors

Fig. 2.1  The human locomotor system as a homeostatic regulation system

Position (Movement/Gait)

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The Skeletal System As the structural framework for the human body, the skeletal system consists mainly of the over 206 bones but also includes cartilages, ligaments, and other connective tissues that stabilize and interconnect them. The bones work in conjunction with the muscular system to aid in posture and locomotion. Many bones of the skeleton function as levers, which change the magnitude and direction of forces generated by the skeletal muscles. Protection is a pivotal role occupied by the skeletal system, as many vital organs are encased within the skeletal cavities (cranial, and spinal or dorsal), and bones form much of the structural basis for other body cavities (examples include the thoracic and pelvic cavities). The skeletal system also serves as an important mineral reserve [7]. The skeletal system provides the calcium needed for all muscular contractions. In summary, the skeletal system is that body system composed of bones and cartilage and performs critical functions for the human body. These critical functions include supporting the body; facilitating movement; protecting internal organs; producing blood cells; and storing and releasing minerals and fat.

The Muscular System The muscular system is one of the most versatile systems in the body. It contains the heart, which constantly pumps blood through the body. It is also responsible for involuntary (e.g., digestion, heartbeat, breathing) and voluntary (e.g., walking, picking up objects) actions. The muscles also help to protect organs in the cavities of the body. Furthermore, it exhibits functions including movement, support, protection, heat generation, and blood circulation. The muscular system includes all types of muscles in the body [7]. In particular, skeletal muscles are the ones that act on the body joints to produce movements. The muscular system contains the tendons, which attach the muscles to the bones. A predominant characteristic of the skeletal muscle tissue is its contractility, and nearly all movement in the body is the result of muscle contractions [9]. Four functions of muscle contraction constitute movement, posture, joint stability, and heat production. Three types of muscle are skeletal, smooth, and cardiac. Figure 2.2 illustrates a conceptual scheme of homeostatic regulation of the human locomotor system. However, the functions of such coordinated/adaptive behaviors may be disturbed in the human due to impairment, disorder, injury, or disability (intractable medical conditions). Gaining insight into the dynamic behavior of the locomotor system in space may significantly lead towards ameliorating human health problems. Ameliorating human health concerns may include the restoration of mobility following injury to the brain or spinal cord that may lead to the possible design of

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2  Significance in the Understanding of the Human Locomotor System Cerebral Cortex and Associated Areas Motor Cortex

Basal Ganglia

Sensory Cortex

Vision

Thalamus

Brain Stem (MLR) (PPN)

Cerebellum Vestibular

Spinal Cord CPG

DTF, VTF

Joint & Muscle

Input Signal Output Signal Muscle Contraction & Movement

Sensory Receptors

Feedback Signal

Fig. 2.2  Conceptual scheme of homeostasis regulation

orthotics and prosthetics, as well as the design, actuation, and control of wheelchairs and other human-aided assistive devices. Furthermore, it may be borne in mind that motor control involves a series of transformations of information. This information is transmitted from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles, to the body, and then back to the brain, Fig. 2.2. The control problem revolves around the specific transfer functions that describe each transformation. The transfer functions depend on the rules of organization and operation that determine the dynamic behavior of each subsystem (that is, central processing, force generation, emergent dynamics, and sensory processing). The dynamics of human locomotion possess content and meaning [29]. These attributive features may obviously be very useful in providing insight into the neural control of the locomotion, neuro-musculoskeletal system. Homeostatic regulation involves three mechanisms: (1) the receptor that receives information about some change in the environment (the feedback sensors consisting of proprioception, visual, and vestibular systems); (2) the control center or integration center that receives and processes information from the receptor (the central nervous system); and (3) the effector that responds to the commands of the control center by either opposing or enhancing the stimulus (the muscles as actuators). This is an ongoing process that continually works to restore and maintain homeostasis. The central nervous system exhibits a significant role as the organ through which the body as a whole is controlled. Our embodiment is an essential dimension of our existence, of our capacities for perception and action, for language and emotion.

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The healthy functioning of the central nervous system plays a dominant role in the regulations in our bodies, our capacities for autonomous agency, our conceptions of ourselves and our relationships with others, and, in fact, in our abilities to lead fulfilling lives. It has evolved such that neurons assemble into the clear “grey matter” nuclei, such as the thalamus or the basal ganglia, which can be located deep within the central nervous system. This efficient organization characterizes the basis of a broad regional specialization of function and thus appears to elucidate communication. Nerve fibers entering or leaving these nuclei may also be identified as “white matter” bundles or tracts, which establish key routes of communication between the nuclei of the central nervous system [1]. Covering the whole surface of the brain is a convoluted, layered sheet of grey matter, which has a thickness of two to three millimeters in man, but with a surface area of several hundred square centimeters. This is the cerebral cortex, one of the most important parts of the central nervous system that is responsible for perception of sensations, voluntary movement, learning, speech, cognition, and emotional control. The cerebral cortex is broadly divided into specialized regions (sensorimotor, visual, auditory, and olfactory) as well as those for high-level perceptual analysis of faces, places, bodies, and visually presented words. Many cortical regions have multiple integrating and analytic properties, and so, despite many popular accounts, regions cannot be simply ascribed to a single function. Furthermore, many brain nuclei control exhibit less obvious, but equally important functions, for example, hormonal and autonomic functions such as cardiovascular control. Much experience from human, such as the perception of pain, has sensory, emotional, and autonomic components (entailing bodily responses that are separate from the brain) and do not involve a single cortical area but rather involve a spatial and temporal pattern of activity in multiple brain regions that are also activated in other contexts, such as fear. The complexities of cortical circuitry are immense. The nervous system is in charge of controlling other body parts by sending an electrochemical signal to the brain whenever there is any change from optimum levels. The brain then corresponds by sending the required stimulus to the respective body organ. The circulatory system, made up of arteries and veins, maintains this balance through the circulation of blood to all other body parts. Through capillaries, an exchange of nutrients in each cell is initiated. This system also enhances the transportation of toxic excretory wastes and other liquid material to the excretory organs. Through lymphatic vessels, the lymphatic system is involved in homeostasis by collecting excess tissue fluids and taking them back to the veins. The endocrine system, the main regulator of this process of homeostasis, on the other hand, contains hormones (chemical messengers) that keep circulating throughout the blood stream and act on the respective target organs. As much as the endocrine system cannot work without coordinating with the nervous system, its effects are long lasting even though they are slow. Skeletal muscle fibers contain numerous nucleus components in each cell, and the cell nuclei are found beneath the plasma membrane of the skin. Both the skeletal and muscular systems work together in the process of performing basic and essential functions necessary for life that include protection (of the brain and other

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internal organs), supportive services of maintaining an upright posture, blood cell formation in a process called hematopoiesis, and storage of minerals and fats, among other minor duties like leverage that involves magnifying movement or force speed. The musculoskeletal system consists of five major tissues that include bones, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and skeletal muscles. The ligaments are the tissues on which one bone is attached to another bone. Cartilages are protective and gel-like substances that line intervertebral discs and joints, while tendons usually attach muscles to bones. Each of these tissues has four connective blocks that build tissues. They include fibroblasts, collagen, elastic fibers, and proteoglycans. Fibroblasts are the mother of all these other connective tissues as it is the one that produces them. Collagens are the principal proteins that are long and thin and are organized into various intertwining fibers to form strong ones that do not stretch. Elastic fibers are found in the walls of arteries, whereas proteoglycans are ground substances normally called matrix in which the other connective tissues reside. On account of homeostatic regulation, the human is capable of exhibiting adaptive behaviors even in diverse and complex environments. Examples of such adaptive behaviors include locomotive behaviors like swimming, flying, and walking and manipulative behaviors such as reaching, capturing, grasping by using hands and arms, etc. These adaptive behaviors involve the intelligent sensory-motor functions that are of utmost significance and the most essential and indispensable ones for the survival of the human. There are several physiological systems that play significant roles in homeostasis in the musculoskeletal system. These systems include the nervous system, the muscular system, the skeletal system, the respiratory system, the cardiovascular system, the digestive system, etc.

The Nervous System The nervous system maintains homeostasis by controlling and regulating the other parts of the body. A deviation from a normal set point acts as a stimulus to a receptor, which sends nerve impulses to a regulating center in the brain. The brain directs an effector to act in such a way that an adaptive response takes place. The adaptive response returns the body to a state of normalcy, and the receptor, the regulating center, and the effector temporarily cease their activities. Regulating centers are located in the central nervous system, consisting of the brain and spinal cord. The hypothalamus is a portion of that and is particularly concerned with homeostasis. It influences the action of the medulla oblongata, a lower part of the brain, the autonomic nervous system, and the pituitary gland. The nervous system has two major portions: the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS). The peripheral nervous system consists of the cranial and spinal nerves. The autonomic nervous system is a part of the

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peripheral nervous system and contains motor neurons that control internal organs. It operates at the subconscious level and has two divisions: the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. In general, the sympathetic system that brings about those results we associate with emergency situations, often called fight or flight reactions, and the parasympathetic system that produces those effects necessary to our everyday existence.

The Cardiovascular System The cardiovascular system, in addition to needing to maintain itself within certain levels, plays a role in the maintenance of other body systems by transporting hormones (heart secretes ANP and BNP) and nutrients (oxygen, EPO to bones, etc.), taking away waste products, providing all living body cells with a fresh supply of oxygen, and removing carbon dioxide. Homeostasis is disturbed if the cardiovascular or lymphatic systems are not functioning correctly. The skin, bones, muscles, lungs, digestive tract, nerves, endocrine, lymphatic, urinary, and reproductive systems all use the cardiovascular system as their “road” or “highway” as far as distribution of things that take place in the body. There are many risk factors for an unhealthy cardiovascular system. Some diseases associated are typically labeled “uncontrollable” or “controllable.” The main uncontrollable risk factors are age, gender, and a family history of heart disease, especially at an early age.

The Respiratory System The respiratory system works in conjunction with the cardiovascular system to provide oxygen to the cells within every body system for cellular metabolism. The respiratory system also removes carbon dioxide. Since carbon dioxide is mainly transported in the plasma as bicarbonate ions that act as a chemical buffer, the respiratory system also helps maintain proper blood pH levels, a fact that is very important for homeostasis. As a result of hyperventilation, carbon dioxide is decreased in the blood levels. This causes the pH of the body fluids to increase. If the acid levels rise above 7.45, the result is respiratory alkalosis. On the other hand, too much carbon dioxide causes pH to fall below 7.35, which results in respiratory acidosis. The respiratory system also helps the lymphatic system by trapping pathogens and protecting the deeper tissues within. An increase in the thoracic space would provide abdominal pressure through the contraction of the respiratory muscles. This may assist in defecation. And the lungs are the gateway to our breath of life.

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The Digestive System Without a regular supply of energy and nutrients from the digestive system, all body systems would soon suffer. The digestive system absorbs organic substances, vitamins, ions, and water that are needed all over the body. In the skin, the digestive tract provides lipids for storage in the subcutaneous layer. Food undergoes three types of processes in the body: digestion, absorption, and elimination. If one of these is not working, there may arise problems that would be extremely noticeable. Mechanics of digestion may include chemical digestion, movements, ingestion, absorption, and elimination. In order to maintain a healthy and efficient digestive system, it may be necessary to observe the components involved. If these components are disturbed, the digestive health may be compromised.

Disabilities, Disorders, Impairments Unfortunately, there is the emergence of several intractable medical conditions, including injuries, infections, or diseases, as a result of damage to the brain and spinal cord. Many of these types of damages lead to serious disorders that affect the memory, cognition, movement, and consciousness. A very high percentage of individuals worldwide suffer injury to the peripheral neuromuscular circuitry that can cause different degrees of limb function loss and even ulceration and articular deformity. The peripheral nerve system is responsible for relaying electrochemical messages between the brain-spinal cord unit and the muscles, joints, and skin. Therefore, any injury suffered to the peripheral neuromuscular circuitry would cause different degrees of limb function loss and even ulceration and articular deformity. This type of injury, thus, becomes a serious health problem leading to life-long disabilities. The most serious of such damages include traumatic brain injury (TBI) that accounts as an impact to the skull; stroke that involves damage resulting from the interruption of the blood supply to the brain; and a range of neurodegenerative disorders, such as Parkinson’s disease or Alzheimer’s disease in which populations of brain cells undergo degenerative change. When the brain is damaged through illness or injury that causes a fall in its functions, there can be devastating personal consequences.

Neuromuscular Disorders Neuromuscular disorders constitute the diseases of the neurons that control the voluntary muscles. Therefore, these disorders affect a part of the nervous system and the muscles. The nerves that facilitate the communication of sensory information between the brain and the voluntary muscles are affected by these disorders. The

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peripheral nervous system is mainly affected due to these disorders. Neuromuscular disorders are mostly genetic disorders. They can arise due to new mutations in our genes as well. They show symptoms such as muscle weakness, movement issues, balance problems, droopy eyelids, troubled swallowing, double vision, and troubled breathing. Some neuromuscular disorders are autoimmune diseases. Some examples of neuromuscular disorders include amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, diabetic neuropathy, toxic neuropathy, myasthenia gravis, small fiber neuropathy, spinal muscular atrophy, etc. They can pose a direct or indirect impact on an individual, leading to a loss of functional capacity. However, most neuromuscular disorders are treatable and can be improved to increase mobility and lengthen life if diagnosed at an early stage.

Musculoskeletal Disorders Musculoskeletal disorders constitute diseases that affect muscles, bones, and joints. They are one of the most common work-related diseases. The development of musculoskeletal disorders increases with age. Musculoskeletal disorders show symptoms such as pain, redness, swelling, muscle weakness, etc. However, people of all ages can be affected by musculoskeletal disorders. Other than age, occupation, activity level, lifestyle, and family history are the risk factors for these disorders [19–21]. Furthermore, significant mental health decline and deteriorated functioning are highly associated with musculoskeletal disorders. Tendinities, carpal tunnel syndrome, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), fibromyalgia, and bone fractures are several musculoskeletal disorders. The pain and discomfort associated with these disorders affect the day-to-day activities of the affected people. Osteoporosis: It is the weakening of bones that occurs when the body loses bone tissue that is not adequately replaced. As people age, particularly women, they are more likely to develop osteoporosis and be at higher risk of breaking bones. Arthritis: It is common and can be debilitating. Osteoarthritis results from the deterioration of the cartilage that coats and cushions bones, enabling joints to operate smoothly. Loss of cartilage results in pain, swelling, and movement problems. Rheumatoid arthritis is one of several forms of arthritis caused by inflammation of the joints and other tissues. Often, they are caused by autoimmune disorders in which the immune system attacks its host body. Bone and joint: Problems can develop in association with other conditions, such as diabetes, chronic kidney disease, or genetic disorders. Cancer: Several types of cancer can originate in bone tissue. In addition, multiple myeloma, a cancer of blood plasma, causes abnormalities in the bone marrow and other bone tissues. Bone fractures: These are a common injury subject to a broad range of research, from surgical techniques to compounds to promote healing to issues of nutrition and rehabilitation.

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It is extremely essential to enhance our understanding of neuro-and pathophysiology in order to gain more insight into capabilities and enable the improvement in the quality of diagnosis, prognosis, and follow-up for individual patients suffering from neurological disorders, degenerative diseases, and injuries. It may be extremely essential to illuminate our basic understanding regarding some common musculoskeletal disorders [19, 21]. Some of these common disorders may include, but not limited to, the following: • • • • • • • • • •

Carpal tunnel syndrome. Tendonitis. Muscle/tendon strain. Ligament sprain. Tension neck syndrome. Thoracic outlet compression. Rotator cuff tendonitis. Epicondylitis. Radial tunnel syndrome. Digital Neuritis.

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Understanding the wrist may assist in better understanding carpal tunnel syndrome. Carpal tunnel syndrome is a common nerve disorder that may interfere with hand strength and sensation, causing a decrease in function. It constitutes a common neurological disorder that occurs when the median nerve, which runs from the forearm into the palm of the hand, becomes pressed or squeezed at the wrist [31, 32]. Figure 2.3 illustrates the carpal tunnel. It is essentially a pinched nerve in the wrist. The median nerve is one of the main nerves of the hand. It controls feeling in the palm side of the thumb, index, middle, and ring fingers. Along with the nine tendons that bend the fingers, the median nerve travels from the forearm into the hand through the narrow carpal tunnel [33, 34]. Carpal tunnel syndrome occurs when the tissues surrounding the tendons in the wrist swell and put pressure on the median nerve. These tissues are called the synovium. The synovium lubricates the tendons and makes it easier to move the fingers. This swelling of the synovium narrows the small space of the carpal tunnel and, over time, crowds the nerve. This can result in hand pain, numbness, tingling, and weakness.

Tendinitis Tendinitis is a condition caused by the tearing of tendon fibers and subsequent inflammation in the tendon. Tendons are the strong connective tissue that connects muscle to bone.

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Fig. 2.3  The carpal tunnel

Tendinitis is inflammation of the thick, fibrous cords that attach muscle to bone. These cords are called tendons. The condition causes pain and tenderness just outside a joint. Tendinitis can occur in any tendon. Tendons that commonly become inflamed include: • • • • •

Tendons of the hand. Tendons of the upper arm that affect the shoulder. Tendons of the forearm at the elbow. The tendon of the quadriceps muscle group at the knee. The Achilles tendon at the ankle. Some of the main symptoms of tendonitis include:

• Pain and tenderness in the affected tendon, which is often worse when you move it. • Swelling. • A grating sensation as the tendon moves. • A lump on the tendon. • Weakness in the affected area. • Decreased range of motion.

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Shoulder Tendonitis The shoulder joint is encircled by muscles, tendons, ligaments, and bursae. Shoulder tendonitis is inflammation of the tendons around the shoulder joint (including the rotator cuff and biceps tendon) as a result of injury, overuse, or other factors. There may be certain risk factors that provoke shoulder tendonitis. These include (1) wear and tear and degeneration of tendons during the ageing process, (2) overuse of tendons around the shoulder joint, and (3) previous trauma or surgical operations to the shoulder. Shoulder tendinitis is a common overuse injury in sports (such as swimming, baseball, and tennis) where the arm is used in an overhead motion. The pain, which is usually felt at the tip of the shoulder and referred or radiated down the arm, occurs when the arm is lifted overhead or twisted. In extreme cases, pain will be present all of the time, and it may even wake one from a deep sleep. The shoulder joint is encircled by muscles, tendons, ligaments, and bursae. Shoulder tendonitis is inflammation of the tendons around the shoulder joint (including the rotator cuff and biceps tendon) as a result of injury, overuse, or other factors, such as diabetes mellitus, thyroid dysfunction, etc.

Wrist Tendonotis Wrist tendonitis, Fig.  2.4, involves pain in the wrist and forearm with repetitive activity [35, 36]. The inflamed tendon is tender to the touch, and there may arise swelling around the inflamed tendon. Fig. 2.4  Wrist tendonitis

Wrist Tendonitis

Muscle

Area of pain Tendons

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89

Biceps Tendonitis The tendon tendinitis of the proximal biceps and the associated tenosynovitis may be characterized by pain at the front of the shoulder and the upper arm that may be caused by inflammation of the biceps tendons sheath or strain of the upper biceps tendon. When the lining becomes inflamed, the tendon is unable to glide smoothly in its covering (sheath). The biceps tendon is one of the anchor points of the biceps muscle, which is important for bending the elbow and rotating the wrist. It also plays a role in shoulder function.

Tibialis Posterior Tendinopathy Tibialis posterior is a muscle in the calf. It has a tendon that runs around the inside of the ankle and attaches in the instep of the foot. Figure 2.5 illustrates the tibialis posterior tendinopathy, which functions like a brace to hold up the arch of the foot [38, 39]. Tibialis posterior tendinopathy is an injury or problem with the tibialis posterior tendon. The main cause of tendinopathy is the wear and tear of the tendon over a period of time. The main symptom is pain, usually around the inside of the ankle and into the instep of the foot, where it attaches. There may also occur some stiffness. The pain is usually worse first thing in the morning and may interfere with day-to-­ day life.

Quadriceps Tendonitis Alignment or overuse problems of the knee structures can lead to strain, irritation, and/or injury of the quadriceps muscle and tendon. This produces pain, weakness, and swelling of the knee joint. These problems can affect people of all ages, but the Fig. 2.5  Tibialis posterior tendinopathy

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Fig. 2.6  Mechanisms of quadriceps

majority of patients with overuse injuries of the knee (and specifically quadriceps tendonitis) are involved in soccer, volleyball, or running activities [40–42]. The patella (kneecap) is the moveable bone on the front of the knee. This unique bone is wrapped inside a tendon that connects the large muscles on the front of the thigh, the quadriceps muscles, to the lower leg bone. The large quadriceps muscle ends in a tendon that inserts into the tibial tubercle, a bony bump at the top of the tibia (shin bone) just below the patella. The tendon together with the patella is called the quadriceps mechanism, Fig. 2.6.

Sprain-Strain The most common soft tissues injured are muscles, tendons, and ligaments. Sprains, strains, and contusions, as well as tendinitis and bursitis, are common soft-tissue injuries. Soft-tissue injuries fall into two basic categories: acute injuries and overuse injuries. Acute injuries are caused by sudden trauma, such as a fall, twist, or blow to the body. Examples of acute injuries include sprains, strains, and contusions. Overuse injuries occur gradually over time; when an athletic or other activity is repeated so often, areas of the body do not have enough time to heal between occurrences. Tendinitis and bursitis are common soft-tissue overuse injuries. Sprain and strain are two types of musculoskeletal injuries that exhibit similarities and differences in the way they may occur.

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A sprain is an injury to a ligament, which is the thick connective tissue that holds two or more bones in place at a joint. When a sprain occurs, one or more ligaments are overstretched, partially torn, or fully torn [18, 19, 21]. A strain is an injury to a muscle or tendon. A tendon is the strong, fiber-like tissue that connects a muscle to a bone and helps their movement. In a strain, a muscle or tendon is overstretched, partially torn, or fully torn. A sprain may cause moderate pain, swelling, bruising, and difficulty moving the affected joint. In sharp contrast to sprains, strains cause severe pain. They may also cause muscle spasms or cramps and additional swelling. Low back injuries, including muscular strains and/or ligament sprains, are exceedingly common in the general population. These injuries may be the result of mechanical stresses and/or functional demands placed on the low back by everyday activities or may be related to an acute injury. Symptoms are believed to be caused by a partial stretching or tearing of the soft tissues (muscles, fascia, ligaments, facet joint capsule, etc.). A cervical musculoligamentous injury (sprain/strain) may cause neck pain due to a partial stretching or tearing of the soft tissues (muscles, fascia, ligaments, tendons, etc.). Non-specific upper extremity complaints such as stiffness, muscle fatigue, and paresthesias may also be reported [23, 26]. Although injury to the neck can result in a fracture or neurologic impairment, by definition, a diagnosis of cervical sprain or strain excludes a fracture.

Radial Tunnel Syndrome The radial nerve constitutes the principal nerve in the upper extremity. It subserves the extensors of the arms and fingers and the sensory nerves of the extensor surface of the arm. It exhibits a long and winding pathway that makes it vulnerable to injury. Radial neuropathies are commonly a consequence of acute traumatic injury and are only rarely caused by entrapment in the absence of such an injury. Since it serves the sensory and motor nerves of the dorsal arm, it derives innervation from most-to-­ all of the spinal roots that participate in the brachial plexus and all three derived trunks. Radial tunnel syndrome involves compression of the radial nerve in the proximal forearm. In the region of the proximal forearm, the radial nerve splits into the posterior interosseous nerve branch (the main trunk) and the sensory branch of the radial nerve (the minor trunk) in the proximal forearm [26]. Compression can occur either before or after this split off of the sensory branch of the radial nerve has occurred. Multiple sites of potential entrapment of the radial nerve include: the origin of the extensor carpi radialis brevis origin; the fibrous bands overlying the radial head; the radial recurrent arterial fan; and the arcades of Frohse, at the entrance to the supinator muscle. The condition has multiple causes, including: space-occupying lesions, such as tumors; local edema or inflammation; overuse of the hand and wrist through repetitive movements, causing the nerve to be compressed; blunt trauma to the proximal forearm with secondary bleeding; and

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idiopathic onset. The condition can occur at any age but is generally seen in younger individuals, most commonly in women aged 30–50. Early radial tunnel symptoms can mimic early lateral epicondylitis, occasionally causing these two entities to be confused. The sensory branches of the radial nerve supply sensation to the dorsum of the arm, forearm, and hand. There are three major sensory branches: (1) the posterior brachial cutaneous nerve, (2) the posterior antebrachial cutaneous nerve, and (3) the superficial branch of the radial nerve. There is great variation in the sensory area innervated by the radial nerve, primarily because of overlapping contributions from other nerves. The main key towards the confirmation of a radial mononeuropathy is through electrodiagnosis and the localization of the area of the injury. This may involve radial sensory nerve conduction, radial motor nerve conduction, including segments in the proximal arm, and needle electromyography (EMG) study of relevant muscles.

Degenerative Disc Disease The human spine, Fig. 2.7, consists of 24 bones or vertebrae in the cervical (neck) spine, the thoracic (chest) spine, and the lumbar (lower back) spine, including the sacral bones. The vertebrae are connected by several joints, which enable actions involving bending, twisting, and carrying loads [43]. The main joint between two vertebrae is called an intervertebral disc. The disc consists of two parts: a tough and fibrous outer layer (annulus fibrosis) and a soft, gelatinous center (nucleus pulposus). These two parts work in conjunction to enable the spine to move and also to provide shock absorption. Degenerative disc disease (spondylosis) constitutes a general term for the description of changes that could occur along any area of the spine (cervical, thoracic, or lumbar) with respect to ageing, and these changes are most common in the lumbar area. In fact, this is actually not a disease. Rather, it constitutes a condition in which the discs degenerate, or lose their flexibility and ability to cushion the spine. Since the discs do not exhibit a good blood supply, they are unable to repair themselves once injured [44]. Degenerative disc disease is a spinal condition caused by the breakdown of the intervertebral discs. With the process of ageing, the spine begins to exhibit signs of wear and tear in which the discs dry out and shrink. These age-related changes may lead to arthritis, disc herniation, or spinal stenosis, which may put pressure on the spinal cord and nerves and may cause back pain. The understanding of degenerative disc may be based on the basic understanding of the functions of the spine. Notably, the spine consists of a column of bones called vertebrae. Between each vertebra is a gel-filled disc that acts like a shock absorber that keeps the vertebrae from rubbing together. Discs have a tough outer wall,

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Fig. 2.7  The human spine

annulus, and a soft center, nucleus. Discs are made up of about 80% water, but slowly lose water with increasing age, and hence, the ability to act as shock absorbers. Degenerative disc disease typically begins with a decrease in the water content of the nucleus pulposus and can lead to tears in the annulus fibrosis. Figure  2.8 illustrates the normal disc, whilst Fig.  2.9 illustrates the degenerative disc. In Fig. 2.9, the degenerative disc disease causes the discs to dry out and shrink. With advanced degenerative disc disease, the loss of disc height may lead to segmental instability that would result in disc slippage (degenerative spondylolisthesis) or asymmetric disc height loss [43–45]. This will cause a side-to-side curvature of the spine (degenerative scoliosis). These advanced degenerative changes that affect the discs, joints, and surrounding soft tissues may further result in the narrowing of the spinal canal (degenerative stenosis). This degenerative stenosis may exert increased pressure on the spinal cord and spinal nerves that pass through the spinal canal. Emerging medical technologies need to recognize the pivotal point of research into the use of information technology and other engineering disciplines to improve

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Fig. 2.8  Normal disc

Fig. 2.9  Degenerative disc

the quality of life and wealth-creating abilities of the elderly and disabled, as well as the effectiveness and efficiency of care of that section of the population [1, 8, 9]. Through the application of engineering, mathematics and computational techniques, neurosciences, and social and cognitive sciences, it may be possible to gain insight into ageing and disabling diseases, coupled with technologies for maintaining independence and reasonable quality of life, and also gain understanding of the response to progressive degenerative diseases and age-related cognitive decline [10, 11, 14].

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One way to gain insight into the musculoskeletal system involves the ability to mathematically model it as a complex system comprising the skeleton, skeletal muscles, ligaments, tendons, joints, cartilage, and other connective tissues. The system involves a human body system that provides the body with movement, stability, shape, and support. This system is mechanically very complex, and hence, the applied computational models may be highly simplified to enable some level of reasonable efficiency. The system is typically assumed to be a rigid-body system in order to be able to take advantage of the standard methods of multibody dynamics for modeling [6–8]. Additionally, the model must exhibit some reasonable representation of the muscle geometry, including the recruitment pattern of the muscles. These characteristics constitute complicated, dynamic problems. The muscles consist of soft tissues that are so much connected/linked to each other and to the bones, ligaments, and other anatomical elements in a very complicated manner. A good model of these complicated geometries may serve well for biomechanical modeling [9, 10]. Furthermore, the muscles are activated by the central nervous system (CNS) by mechanisms that are not well understood toward the modeling of the system in the required detailed. Therefore, the modeling of these mechanisms is based on assumptions, typically some kind of optimality condition. The fundamental problem is that there are more muscles than necessary to drive the degrees of freedom of the system, which implies that there are infinitely many muscle recruitment patterns that are acceptable from a dynamical point of view. This problem is often referred to as the redundancy problem of the muscle recruitment. Musculoskeletal models may be divided into two groups: (1) the forward dynamics and (2) the inverse dynamics models, respectively. The forward dynamics methodology computes the motion based on a predicted muscular activation. While this is attractive in view of the detailed modeling of various physical phenomena, it is a very computationally intensive control problem and requires a costly optimization to make the model perform a specific task [18, 19, 21]. On the other hand, the inverse dynamics methodology computes the muscle activation based on a specified task, for example, a known motion. This puts many restrictions on the model, but it is computationally much more efficient. This efficiency may be exploited to build more complex models comprising more muscles, that means, a finer level of details of the mechanical model of the body. Furthermore, gaining insight into the brain would enable further technological initiatives that would involve interventions in the brain, the organ that furnishes us with the capacities that underpin our existence, personal and social [15, 18, 21]. Some of the interventions may include invasive physical intrusions into the brain, while others rely on methods that interact with the brain from outside, typically by exposing the brain to electromagnetic fields, in order to provide treatments of further neurological and psychiatric disorders, which at present lack safe and effective treatments.

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References 1. The Nuffield Council on Bioethics. (2013). Novel neurotechnologies: Intervening in the brain. Nuffield Council on Bioethics. 2. Lebedev, M. A., & Nicolelis, M. A. L. (2017). Brain-machine interfaces: From basic science to neuroprostheses and neurorehabilitation. Physiological Reviews, 97, 767–837. 3. Sarkodie-Gyan, T., Huiying, Y., Alaqtash, M., Bogale, M. A., Moody, J., & Brower, R. (2013). Application of fuzzy sets for assisting the physician’s model of functional impairments in human locomotion. Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.3233/ IFS-­120704. IOS Press. ISSN: 1064-1246. 4. Sarkodie-Gyan, T., Alaqtash, M., Huiying, Y., Spier, E., Abdelgawad, A., & Brower, R. (2011). Measurement of functional impairments in human locomotion using pattern analysis. Elsevier Journal of Measurement, 44, 181–191. 5. Hesse, S., Uhlenbrock, D., & Sarkodie-Gyan, T. (1999). Pattern of severely disabled Hemiparetic subjects on a new controlled gait trainer as compared to assisted treadmill walking with partial body weight support. Clinical Rehabilitation, 13, 401–410, 0269-2155(99) CR2710A. 6. Mergner, T. (2002). The Matryoshka dolls principle in human dynamic behavior in space: A theory of linked references for multisensory perception and control of action. Cahiers de Psychologie Cognitive/Current Psychology of Cognition, 21(2–3), 129–212. 7. Yin, J., & Yuan, Q. (2015). Structural homeostasis in the nervous system: A balancing act for wiring plasticity and stability. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 8, Article 439. 8. Francis Heylighten and Cliff Joslyn. (2001). Cybernetics and second-order cybernetics. In R. A. Meyers (Ed.), Encyclopedia of physical science & technology (3rd ed.). Academic. 9. Elting, J. W., van der Hoeven, J. H., Renken, R. J., et al. (2003). Clinical neuroengineering: Engineering principles applied to clinical neuroscience. NeuroImaging Center Groningen Group Leader: Prof. Dr. Ir. N. M. Maurits. 10. Kriegeskorte, N., Mur, M., & Bandetini, P. (2008, November). Representational similarity analysis-connecting the branches of systems neuroscience. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, 2, Article 4. 11. Newell, A.  F. (1996). Technology and the disabled. Technology, Innovation and Society, 12(1), 21–23. 12. van der Kooij, H., Koopman, B., & van der Helm, F. C. T. (2008). Human motion control. Delft University/Twente University. 13. Grossman, M. (2002). Frontotemporal dementia: A review. Journal of International Neuropsychological Society, 8, 566–583. 14. Bak, T., & Hodges, J.  R. (1999). Cognition, language and behavior in Motor Neurone disease: Evidence of frontotemporal dysfunction. Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders, 10, 29–32. 15. Sarkodie-Gyan, T., Huiying, Y., Bogale, M., Hernandez, N.  V., & Pirela-Cruz, M. (2017). Application of multiple sensor data fusion for the analysis of human dynamic behavior inspace: Assessment and evaluation of mobility-related functional impairments. Journal of Biomedical Science and Engineering, 10, 182–203. 16. Brun, A. (1987). Frontal lobe degeneration of the non-Alzheimer type: I.  Neuropathology. Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, 6, 193–208. 17. Elfgren, C., Passant, U., & Risberg, J. (1993). Neuropsychological findings in frontal lobe dementia. Dementia, 4, 214–219. 18. Malouin, F., Richards, C. L., Jackson, P. L., Dumas, F., & Doyon, J. (2003). Brain activations during motor imagery oflocomotor-related tasks: A PET study. Human Brain Mapping, 19, 47–62. [PubMed: 12731103]. 19. Adams, R., & Parsons, O. (2003). Neuropsychology for clinical practice: Etiology, assessment, and treatment of common neurologic disorders. American Psychological Association.

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20. Liu-Ambrose, T., Pang, M. Y., & Eng, J. J. (2007). Executive function is independently associated with performances of balance and mobility in community-dwelling older adults after mild stroke: Implications for falls prevention. Cerebrovascular Diseases, 23, 203–210. [PubMed: 17143004]. 21. Woodruff-Pak, D.  S., & Papka, M. (1999). Theories of neuropsychology and aging. In V. L. Bengston & K. W. Schaie (Eds.), Handbook of theories of aging. Springer. 22. Schmidt, R. A., & TDL. (1999). Motor control and learning. Human kinetics. Human Kinetics. 23. Dubost, V., Kressig, R. W., Gonthier, R., et al. (2006). Between dual-task related changes in stride velocity and stride time variability in healthy older adults. Human Movement Science, 25, 372–382. [PubMed: 16714067]. 24. Braak, H., & Braak, E. (1998). Evolution of neuronal changes in the course of Alzheimer’s disease. Journal of Neural Transmission Supplementum, 53, 127–140. 25. Ernst, J., Krapp, S., Schuster, T., Forstl, H., Kurz, A., & Diehl-Schmid, J. (2007). Car driving ability of patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration and Alzheimer’s disease. Nervenarzt, 81(1), 79–85. 26. Wang, L.  H., & Weiss, M.  D. (2013). Anatomical, clinical, and electrodiagnostic features of radial neuropathies. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America, 24, 33–47. 27. Alaqtash, M., Huiying, Y., Brower, R., Abdelgawad, A., Spier, E., & Sarkodie-Gyan, T. (2011). Application of wearable sensors for human gait analysis using fuzzy computational algorithm. Elsevier Journal of Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence, 24(6), 1018–1025. 28. Huiying, Y., Alaqtash, M., Spier, E., & Sarkodie-Gyan, T. (2010). Analysis and diagnosis of muscle activity during gait cycle using fuzzy rule-based reasoning. Elsevier Journal of Measurement, 43, 1106–1114. 29. Nishikawa, K., Biewener, A. A., et al. (2007). Neuromechanics: An integrative approach for understanding motor control. In Symposium “Biomechanics and neuromuscular control” Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, January 4–8, 2006, at Orlando, Florida. 30. Hesse, S., Uhlenbrock, D., & Sarkodie-Gyan, T. (1999). Gait pattern of severely disabled Hemiparetic subjects on a new controlled gait trainer as compared to assisted treadmill walking with partial body weight support. Clinical Rehabilitation, 13, 401–410, 0269-2155(99) CR2710A. 31. Ibrahim, I., Khan, W. S., Goddard, N., & Smithham, P. (2012). Carpal tunnel syndrome: A review of the recent literature. The Open Orthopaedics Journal, 6(Suppl i: MS), 69–76. 32. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Orthoinfo Basics, American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons (AAOS). 33. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, Information for patients, Berkshire Healthcare, NHS Foundation Trust. 34. Historical Review: The Mayo Clinic and Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. 35. Robert Giffin, J., & Stantsh, W. D. (1993, September). Overuse tendonitis and rehabilitation. Canadian Family Physician Medicin de familie canadien, 39, 1762–1769. 36. The Sports Medicine Patient Advisor: Wrist Tendonitis. 37. Wrist Tendinopathy, International Tennis Federation. 38. Beeson, P. (2014). Posterior tibialis tendinopathy. Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association, 104(5), 455–467. 39. Premkumar, A., Perry, M.  B., Dwer, A.  J., Gerber, L.  H., et  al. (2002). Sonography and MR imaging of posterior Tibial tendinopathy. American Journal of Roentgenology, 178(1), 223–232. 40. Nance, E.  P., Jr., & Kaye, J.  J. (1982). Injuries of the quadriceps mechanism. Radiology, 142(2), 301–307. 41. Advanced Physical Therapy: Orthopedics, Spine, Sports Medicine “ A patient’s guide to Quadriceps Tendonitis”. 42. The Sports Medicine Patient Advisor “Quadriceps contusion (Thigh Bruise) and Strain”.

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43. Schizas, G.  K., & Kosmopoulos, V. (2010). Disc degeneration: Current surgical options. European Cells and Materials, 20, 306–315. 44. Kun, H.  S., Pang Hung, W., & Jang, I.  I.-T. (2020). Lumbar Degenerative Disease Part 1: Anatomy and pathophysiology of intervertebral discogenic pain and radiofrequency ablation of basivertebral and sinuvertertebral nerve treatment for chronic review of literature. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 21, 1483. 45. Chester, J., Donnally, I. I. I., & Varacation, M. (2018). Lumbar degenerative disk disease. Penn Highlands Healthcare System, ResearchGate.

Chapter 3

Challenges and Concerns to Society: The Human Locomotor System

The central nervous system controls all body activities, ranging from heart rate and sexual function to emotion, learning, and memory. It influences the response to disease of the immune system and to determine, in part, how well people respond to medical treatments. Ultimately, it shapes our thoughts, hopes, dreams, and imagination [1]. It may be concluded that the central nervous system is what makes us human. However, there are several illnesses and injuries that result in damages to the brain and its functions. These damaging conditions may lead to serious disorders that affect memory, cognition, movement, or consciousness or cause conditions such as chronic pain. Several disorders of the brain and the nervous system result in more hospitalizations than any other disease group, including heart disease and cancer. Musculoskeletal conditions are prevalent and their impact is pervasive. They are the most common cause of severe long-term pain, functional limitations, physical disability, and social and economic implications, and they affect a vast majority of people around the world [31]. They significantly affect the psychosocial status of affected people as well as their families and caregivers. They are also highly associated with significant mental health decline and deteriorated functioning [1–3]. Because of population increases and ageing, the number of people with musculoskeletal conditions is rapidly increasing. Musculoskeletal conditions are the main cause of disability among older age groups. Moreover, the pain and physical disability brought about by musculoskeletal conditions affect social functioning and mental health, further diminishing the quality of life of the patient. Current medical interventions remain marginal and unable to offer prevention and effective treatment for most chronic musculoskeletal conditions because their etiology and pathogenesis are unknown [1]. This may be attributed to our marginal understanding of the functions of the locomotor system in both healthy and unhealthy states. This may be manifested by the “absence” of the theory of etiology and pathogenesis of prevalent chronic musculoskeletal conditions, which already dominate the list of major causes of disability. These include:

© The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 T. Sarkodie-Gyan, H. Yu, The Human Locomotor System, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32781-0_3

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• Degenerative conditions in the spine and joints (osteoarthritis, degenerative disk disease, etc.) • Skeletal deformities (scoliosis, kyphosis, etc.) • Many types of muscle pathology (muscular dystrophy, myofascial trigger points, fibromyalgia, etc.) • Back and neck pain and other musculoskeletal pain with an indeterminate etiology. New technology initiatives have helped to increase the years of life expectancy so that the average age at death for both men and women has now become increasingly high. In fact, the increase in life expectancy may be partly due to medical advances. However, treatments for disorders like Alzheimer’s have not advanced at the same rate as those for other common diseases. The understanding of the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord) as the control center for the human body may constitute a paramount focus in the human locomotor system. The nervous system has a special status in human life that distinguishes it from other organs [1–3]. Its healthy functioning plays a central role in the operation of our bodies, our capacities for autonomous agency, our conceptions of ourselves and our relationships with others, and thus in our abilities to lead fulfilling lives. Hence, the brain plays an irreducible role in the maintenance and performance of the body, including controlled movements and autonomic functions, as well as thoughts, emotions, memories, and behavior. Illness or injury that results in damage to the brain and its functions may lead to serious disorders that affect memory, cognition, movement, or consciousness or cause conditions such as chronic pain. The brain exhibits limited capacity to repair damaged tissue, although new functional connections may be formed. Therefore, there arises the need for novel initiatives to address some of the distressing and disabling effects of brain damage by intervening in the functions of the brain itself. Neuroscience has made some significant discoveries in areas, including, but not limited to, genetics, neural plasticity, molecular neuropharmacology, and imaging, among other techniques [4–7]. The ability to understand these techniques may directly lead to the improvement of life and also improve the efficiency and effectiveness of services provided to people with disabilities, neurological diseases, and injuries in order to improve the quality of care. The understanding of genetics has provided new insights into underlying disease mechanisms and is beginning to suggest new treatments. With the mapping of the human genome, neuroscience may be able to make more rapid progress in identifying genes that either contribute to human neurological disease or that directly cause disease. Mapping animal genomes may support the search for genes that regulate and control many complex behaviors [7–9]. The identification of key disease genes may help to underlie several neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Disability-Adjusted Life Year, DALY

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Research thrusts into the molecular bases of neural plasticity may reveal how learning and memory occur and how declines might be reversed. It may also lead to new approaches toward the treatment of chronic pain. Gaining insights into the mechanisms of molecular neuropharmacology may provide insight into the mechanisms of addiction [8, 9]. These advances may further lead to new treatments for depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Revolutionary imaging techniques that include magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography may, to some extent, be able to reveal the brain systems that underlie attention, memory, and emotions and may assist in indicating dynamic changes that occur in schizophrenia [1, 10]. The insight and understanding of how and why neurons die, as well as the discovery of stem cells, which divide and form new neurons, may offer good contributions in clinical applications. It would dramatically improve the outlook for reversing the effects of injury, both in the brain and spinal cord. Knowledge and insight into new principles and molecules responsible for guiding nervous system development may lead to a better understanding of certain disorders of childhood. Together with the discovery of stem cells, these advances may point toward novel strategies for helping the brain or spinal cord regain functions lost to diseases. Musculoskeletal conditions are the leading contributors to disability worldwide. The diseases consist of countless conditions that affect the human locomotor system. The human locomotor system includes the muscles, bones, joints, tendons, and ligaments and has a growing impact worldwide. Those conditions are typically characterized by pain (often persistent) and limitations in mobility, dexterity, and overall level of functioning, reducing the ability of the human to work (low back pain), with low back pain being the single leading cause of disability worldwide [1, 2]. The impact of these conditions is measurable (according to the World Health Organization, WHO) using disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), which combine the years lived with disability (YLDs) and the years of life lost (YLLs) through premature death [13]. The WHO defines the following parameters as measures of disability:

Disability-Adjusted Life Year, DALY This is a measure of overall disease burden.

DALY  YLL  YLD

Where YLL: Years of Life Lost. And YLD: Years Lived with Disability. And

YLL  N  L

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Where N = number of deaths, and. L is the standard life expectancy at age of death in years. The DALY Index is a summary measure that combines time lost through premature death (YLLs) and time lived in states of less-than-optimal health, loosely referred to as “disability,” or years lived with disability (YLDs). One DALY can be thought of as one lost year of “healthy” life. DALYs for a specific cause are calculated as the sum of the YLLs from that cause and the YLDs for people living in states of less than good health resulting from a specific cause. The challenges of musculoskeletal conditions on the society include such disorders as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, osteoporosis, and low back pain. Low back pain is the main contributor to the overall burden of musculoskeletal conditions [11, 12, 72, 76]. It affects nearly everyone at some point in time and about high percentage of the population at any given point. Cultural factors greatly influence the prevalence and prognosis of low back pain. Other contributors to the overall burden of musculoskeletal conditions include fractures (fragility fractures, traumatic fractures), osteoarthritis, other injuries (muscles, joints, traumatic brain injuries), neck pain, amputations, and rheumatoid arthritis. Musculoskeletal conditions significantly limit mobility and dexterity, leading to lower levels of well-being and a reduced ability to participate in society [71, 74, 78]. Human mobility may be characterized as coordinated and adaptive behavior that emerges from the interplay among descending output from the central nervous system, sensory input from the body and environment, muscle dynamics, and the emergent dynamics of the whole body. This coordinated and adaptive behavior in mobility may be the result of the intelligent sensory-motor functions. The functions of the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) are subject to damage caused by injury, infection, or disease [1, 2]. Many of these types of damages lead to serious disorders that affect memory, cognition, movement, or consciousness and cause conditions such as chronic pain, neurological disorders, and some of the most intractable medical conditions. Some of these intractable health conditions include:

Stroke Stoke constitutes a cardiovascular disease that affects the supply of blood to the brain. The interruption in blood flow to the affected area of the brain starves the cells of valuable nutrients and oxygen, which in a matter of minutes may be able to kill the cells. After the death of these cells, the human body parts controlled by them become unable to function [10]. In fact, the overwhelming effects of strokes may often be permanent because dead brain cells may normally not be replaced. The effects of stroke depend upon the type of stroke, the area of the brain affected, and the extent of the brain injury. Brain injuries sustained from stroke can affect the senses of the patient, motor activity, speech, and the ability to comprehend speech. Paralysis or weakness on one side of the body is also common.

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The effects of loss of senses, motor activity, speech, and the ability to understand speech may be devastating for patients. These losses may culminate and cause victims to feel as if they are not whole people.

Traumatic Brain Injury Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the leading causes of death and disability in children and young adults around the world. TBI is defined as the result of the application of either external physical force or rapid acceleration/deceleration forces that disrupt brain function, as manifested by immediately apparent impairments in cognitive and/or physical function. It is important to note that it is the application of such forces to the brain, rather than to the head per se, that produces a TBI. In other words, not all head injuries produce brain injuries, and some brain injuries (particularly those resulting from acceleration/deceleration forces) may occur without apparent head injury. A closed head injury arises when the head suddenly and viciously hits an object, but the object does not pierce the skull. A penetrating injury transpires when an object punctures the skull and enters the brain tissue. Besides, for distinguishing brain injuries as open or closed, there exist three separate processes that cause injury to the brain: bruising, tearing, and swelling. Bruising, or a contusion, can occur when the brain slams into the front or back of the skull. This action can cause blood vessels to rupture, which releases uncontrollable amounts of blood. The flowing of blood can be very bad due to the fact that the skull is very hard. The accumulation of blood can cause pressure against the delicate brain, which may interrupt some functions of the brain. Tearing can occur when the brain hits the front and back of the skull, and the energy actually tears apart some of the brain. The tearing or cutting of brain tissue can be a very serious problem. The portions of the brain that are being torn can be the wires that make the brain work. If the connections are lost, certain functions controlled by the brain become lost. Swelling occurs in the brain in much the same way as if any other body parts were injured. For example, when a hammer smashes the finger, the finger will bleed, and the body will realize that the finger is hurt and send agents to help heal the finger. The difference between the finger and the brain is that the finger has room to swell; the skull encapsulates the brain and it has no room to swell. When the brain does swell, it puts pressure on the brain, which can distort the structure and even cause important portions of the brain to lose their ability to control breathing or heart rate. Traumatic brain injuries can cause several types of disabilities. The disabilities ensuing from a TBI depend upon the severity of the injury, location of the injury, age, and general health of the patient. Some of the more common disabilities include cognition, sensory processing, communication, and behavioral or mental health.

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Traumatic brain injury (and also mild TBI and concussion) can have a serious and long-term impact on the cognitive, physical, and psychological functions of a person. In fact, many people suffer from balance and instability problems after (m)TBI. There is a very large target population associated with (mild) traumatic brain injury. These include, but are not limited to, football, boxing, auto/motor vehicle/ transportation crashes, etc.

Spinal Cord Injuries The spinal cord is protected by the spinal column and acts as the major link between the brain and the rest of the body. When an injury is inflicted on the spinal cord, there can be significant physiological consequences. The vertebrae can still be broken or dislocated and cause traumatic injury to the spinal cord. The injuries to the spinal cord can occur at any level. Depending on the segment of the cord that is injured, and the severity of the injury, certain body functions are compromised. Spinal cord injuries usually result when there is dramatic trauma inflicted to the spinal column [7, 10, 16]. These traumas can arise from numerous accidents, including catastrophic falls, being thrown from a horse or through the windshield of an automobile, or any other kind of trauma that causes the vertebrae in the back or neck to be crushed or compressed. These types of accidents can cause permanent damage at the cervical level of the spinal cord and below. Paralysis of most of the body, called quadriplegia, is a likely result of a spinal cord injury. Paralysis of the lower trunk and lower extremities, called paraplegia, is also possible and often the result of automobile accidents [14–17]. Spinal cord injuries are usually termed complete or incomplete, in which complete spinal cord injuries being the worst. The class of incomplete spinal cord injuries determines how many motor functions will remain. A complete spinal cord injury results in no communication whatsoever between the body and the brain below the injury and is termed class A in the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale. Incomplete injuries are usually a more promising condition. Class B means that there is sensory, but not motor, function preserved below the level of injury. Class C constitutes that motor function is preserved, but more than half of the key muscles below the injury are not strong enough to move against gravity. Class D states that motor function is preserved and at least half of key muscle groups are able to move against gravity [16–18]. Class E is termed as having normal motor and sensory functions. Spinal cord injuries affect each patient differently, and the complications caused depend upon which area of the spinal cord was injured and how bad it was. Spinal cord injuries can cause patients to have trouble with a number of different complications, including, but not limited to, breathing, pneumonia, irregular heartbeat, low blood pressure, blood clots, spasm, autonomic dysreflexia, pressure sores, pain,

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bladder and bowel problems, reproductive and sexual function, and finally being able to ambulate and move certain portions of the body.

Parkinson’s Disease Parkinson’s disease occurs when the nerve cells, or neurons, in the substantia nigra portion of the brain die or become impaired. The neurons in this portion of the brain typically produce a brain chemical known as dopamine. This chemical messenger is responsible for relaying signals between the substantia nigra and the corpus striatum, which produces smooth, purposeful muscle activity [2, 23]. The loss of dopamine causes erratic firing of the nerve cells in the striatum, leaving the patient unable to direct or control their movements in a normal manner. Parkinson’s patients lose about 80% of their dopamine-producing cells, and the cause of the loss of these cells is not known or understood. Parkinson’s disease is a neurological disorder that falls into a group of conditions called motor system disorders. The four key symptoms are tremors or trembling in hands, arms, legs, jaw, and face; rigidity or stiffness of the limbs and trunk; bradykinesia or slowness of movement; and postural instability or impaired balance and coordination. As these conditions become more severe, patients tend to have trouble walking, talking, or completing simple tasks [81]. Parkinson’s disease is usually termed chronic and/or progressive. By chronic, it means that the disease will persist over a long period of time. Progressive means that the symptoms tend to grow worse over time. The disease is also neither contagious nor usually inherited, meaning it does not pass from one family member or generation to the next.

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or (ALS), sometimes called Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a rapidly progressive, invariably fatal neurological disease that attacks the neurons responsible for controlling voluntary muscles. The disease belongs to a group of disorders known as motor neuron diseases, which are characterized by the gradual degeneration and death of motor neurons. The motor neurons are nerve cells located in the brain, brainstem, and spinal cord that serve as controlling units and vital communication links between the nervous system and the voluntary muscles of the body. Messages from motor neurons in the brain are transmitted to motor neurons in the spinal cord and, from thereafter, to particular muscles. In ALS, both the neurons in the brain and spinal cord degenerate or die, ceasing to send messages to the muscles. Unable to function, the muscles gradually weaken, waste away, and twitch. Eventually, the ability of the brain to start and control voluntary movement is lost.

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Alzheimer’s Disease Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is an irreversible neural degenerative disease that attacks the brain, causing disruptions in memory, cognition, personality, and other functions that eventually lead to death from complete brain failure. Patients with Alzheimer’s disease experience difficulties performing daily tasks independently. Studies have found that low levels of physical and mental activity significantly increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease [35].

Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) primarily affects the frontal and anterior temporal lobes of the brain. These areas control the human “executive functions” like reasoning, personality, social behavior, movement, speech, language, and some aspects of memory [21, 23, 34, 36]. Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common form of arthritis. It is a potentially devastating joint disease. Its pathophysiology is marked by a gradual degenerative process accompanied by low-grade inflammation, and although there is a strong correlation between age and OA risk, the abnormal changes that occur in the articular cartilage of people with OA differ notably from the typical changes associated with joint ageing in several important ways. Risk factors for OA are multiple and span a variety of risk domains, such as lifestyle issues (e.g., obesity and engagement in manual labor), genetic predisposition, sex and ethnicity (risk is higher in women and African Americans), and comorbidities. Clinical outcomes for people with OA typically involve pain, limitations of daily living activities, and an overall diminution of quality of life (QOL). It is characterized by a loss of joint cartilage, which leads to pain and loss of function primarily in the knees and hips and affects 9.6% of men and 18% of women aged above 60 years. The need to evaluate the degree of this burden, as well as to determine treatment approaches and measure their success, requires instruments for measuring QOL. Rheumatoid arthritis is an inflammatory condition that usually affects multiple joints. It affects 0.3–1.0% of the general population and is more prevalent among women and in developed countries. Persistent inflammation leads to joint destruction, but the disease can be controlled with drugs. Osteoporosis is characterized by low bone mass, and micro-architectural deterioration is a major risk factor for fractures of the hip, vertebrae, and distal forearm. Hip fracture is the most detrimental fracture, being associated with 20% mortality and 50% permanent loss of function.

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Neurodegeneration Peripheral nerve injuries are a serious health problem that result from damage to the nerves located outside of the brain and spinal cord, often resulting in the loss of motor or sensory function or both functions. This is the progressive loss of structural integrity and functional capacity in individual nerve cells associated with ­specific disorders. It causes weakness, numbness and pain, usually in the hands and feet [22, 24]. It can also affect other areas and body functions, including digestion, urination and circulation. Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and Huntington’s disease are examples of neurodegenerative disorders in which specific populations of neurons undergo such change. Peripheral neuropathy, or diabetic sensory neuropathy, is an anatomically diffuse process primarily affecting sensory and autonomic fibers. People with diabetes have mild to severe forms of nervous system damage, causing peripheral neuropathy with impaired sensation or pain involving the feet and/or hands. Foot deformity and callus formation resulting from focal areas of high pressure, carpal tunnel syndrome, poor glucose control leading to impaired wound healing, and other nerve problems are some of the complicated conditions. Long nerves are affected first, with symptoms typically beginning insidiously in the toes and then advancing proximally. This leads to loss of protective sensation (LOPS), whereby a person is unable to feel minor trauma from mechanical, thermal, or chemical sources. When foot lesions are present (foot ulceration), the reduction in autonomic nerve functions may also inhibit wound healing, which leads to amputations. A substantial percentage of people with diabetes develop at least one foot ulcer in their lifetime.

Lumbar Degenerative Disk Disease The sequelae of disk degeneration are among the leading causes of functional incapacity in both men and women and belong to a common source of chronic disability in the years of working. Disk degeneration constitutes structural disruption and cell-­ mediated changes in composition. Mechanical, traumatic, nutritional, and genetic factors seem to play a role in the cascade of disk degeneration, albeit to a variable degree in different individuals. The presence of degenerative change is by no means an indicator of symptoms, and there is a very high prevalence in asymptomatic individuals. The etiology of pain as the symptom of degenerative disease is complex and appears to be a combination of mechanical deformation and the presence of inflammatory mediators.

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Scoliosis The lateral curvature of the spine (scoliosis), as shown in Fig. 3.1, exhibits several varieties, an unknown cause, and an unpredictable course [63, 66]. The curve is usually “S” or “C” shaped over three dimensions. Mild scoliosis does not typically cause problems, but more severe cases can affect breathing and movement. Pain is usually present in adults and can worsen with age. There is a serious need for innovative thinking and research to enable our understanding of scoliosis [64, 65]. There exists also the secondary scoliosis due to neuropathic and myopathic conditions, which may lead to a loss of muscular support for the spinal column. Hence, the spinal column is pulled in abnormal directions. Some conditions that may cause secondary scoliosis include muscular dystrophy, spinal muscular atrophy, poliomyelitis, cerebral palsy, spinal cord trauma, and myotonia [62, 65–70].

Muscular Dystrophy Duchenne muscular dystrophy and myotonic dystrophy are genetic, progressive muscle diseases. These muscular dystrophies, which are currently incurable, cause muscle wasting or muscle weakness and decrease the quality of life of patients. Fig. 3.1  Illustration of scoliosis

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In addition to muscular impairments, cognitive impairments are also reported in both Duchenne muscular dystrophy and myotonic dystrophy [68, 69, 72]. Cognitive impairments in each type of muscular dystrophy are different and closely related to psychosocial variables and the quality of life of the patients. Muscular dystrophy is a genetic, progressive disease of the muscles with several clinical forms, all of which have an early onset and are incurable with current medical technology [69, 70]. These diseases severely decrease motor functions and make it difficult to live an independent social life or engage in an occupation. Muscular dystrophy causes not only physical impairments but also cognitive impairments.

Low Back Pain Low back pain is a leading cause of disability. It occurs in similar proportions in all cultures and interferes with quality of life and work performance. There are a few cases of back pain that may be due to specific causes, while most cases are non-­ specific. Acute back pain is the most common presentation and is usually self-­ limiting, lasting less than 3 months regardless of treatment [73–75]. Chronic back pain is a more difficult problem, which often has a strong psychological overlay (work dissatisfaction, boredom), and a generous compensation system contribute to it. Among the diagnoses offered for chronic pain is fibromyalgia, an urban condition that does not differ materially from other instances of widespread chronic pain. Low back pain is neither a disease nor a diagnostic entity of any sort. The term refers to pain of variable duration in an area of the anatomy afflicted so often that it has become a paradigm of responses to external and internal stimuli. The incidence and prevalence of low back pain are roughly the same the world over. This type of pain ranks high (often first) as a cause of disability and inability to work, as an interference with the quality of life, etc.

Myofascial Pain Syndrome The myofascial pain syndrome is defined by the presence of myofascial trigger points in a palpable taut band that produces pain and tenderness in the muscle or its fascia. It is a common cause of musculoskeletal pain that is associated, in the majority of cases, with other pathologies and increases the comorbidities of these primary entities [76–80]. Understanding the pathophysiology and the pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments provides better tools to the clinician in order to improve the quality of life of the patients who suffer pain.

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Military Action Blast-related trauma is receiving a lot of attention due to the increase in the use of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in Iraq and Afghanistan [28]. These injuries may be due to the overpressure of the blast itself (primary blast injury), or due to objects put into motion by the blast overpressure (secondary blast injury), or by people being put into motion by the blast (tertiary blast injury). Blast-related injuries account for 88% of military personnel treated at an echelon II medical unit in Iraq [29, 30, 32]. About 47% of these injuries involved the head. A full 97% of the injuries to one Marine unit in Iraq were due to explosions (65% IEDs, 32% mines). Of these injured, 53% involved the head or neck. Most (82%) returned to duty following an average of 3 light duty days, which ranged from 0 days to 30 days of light duty [25, 27, 32]. As more powerful explosives are used in warfare, more soldiers are rendered dazed or unconscious by the explosion that may cause no external injury [26]. Retrograde or anterograde amnesia is commonly present upon regaining consciousness, along with severe headaches, tinnitus, hypersensitivity to noise, and tremors. This effect was observed and reported during the Great War and again during World War II.

Mission Essential Fitness (Military) Current research has suggested that non-battle injuries (NBIs) have become a major cause of morbidity and mortality during combat operations [25]. There arises a significant shift from the influence of infectious diseases to non-battle ones, with special reference to the first and second world wars and the Korean War. Musculoskeletal and connective tissue conditions made up the second-leading category of hospitalizations in Operations Desert Shield and Storm (14%) and the fourth-leading category in Operation Joint Endeavor (10%), respectively. The number of non-battle deaths from unintentional trauma during the Operations Desert Shield and Storm exceeded the number of battle-related deaths. Even though the impact of NBIs during military operations is well recognized, the epidemiology of these injuries is poorly understood [26–29]. During past military operations, analyses to describe injury incidence, types, severity, causes, and treatment outcomes were conducted at the completion of the operations when copies of the medical records were centralized for review [26, 27]. Lessons learned from these retrospective analyses led to major advancements in medical evaluation, treatment, and rehabilitation that have greatly benefited injured service members. This retrospective approach to injury surveillance did not, however, allow identification of injury problems early in the deployments, when changes in practice and policy could have lowered the injury risk for deployed soldiers.

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The combined categories of injuries and musculoskeletal disorders in the US Army accounted for over 30% of all hospitalizations in 1992. The ten leading types of injury for the army that accounted for 41% of all injury hospitalizations included ankle fractures, intracranial injury, fracture of face bones, sprains and strains on the knee, dislocation of the knee, fracture of radius/ulna, fracture of one or more fingers, and open wounds of fingers [28–30]. Injuries and musculoskeletal disorders have a greater impact on the health and readiness of the United States military than any other category of medical complaint. Soldiers require high levels of strength, power, speed, and agility to carry out their mission in today’s modern combat environment. Physical training and physical fitness are required to accomplish military missions, and many military occupations routinely require a higher level of physical exertion and fitness [31–33]. There is the urgent need for fitness and the requisite physical training to maintain mission readiness, the burden and impact of training injuries, and the protective effects of fitness in preventing subsequent injuries in a complex and dynamic matrix of competing requirements [25–27]. There is a need for a novel technology that will offer neurophysiological measures towards the understanding of the functioning of the nervous system within operationally relevant settings and may extend the capabilities to develop cognitive state classification algorithms that may be used to assess soldier-system performance.

Physiological Functions in Human During Spaceflight Humans depend on a sophisticated sensory-motor system to sustain proper balance control [23, 79]. This system is calibrated to terrestrial gravity and relies on the application of gravitational forces to provide a frame of reference in order to supply a necessary data stream to the central nervous systems (CNS) located in the brain. Key motion sensors include subtle organs located in the vestibular system (inner ear) that function as ultra-sensitive accelerometers for motion and direction [37, 38]. The somatosensory system is that system that includes tension, pressure, and motion receptors located in the skin, muscles, and joints that assist in the spatial awareness and perception through proprioception, and the visual and auditory senses complete the spatial orientation system [44–47, 52]. However, in the absence of gravity, signals from the central vestibular system, peripheral pressure receptors, and visual sense become misleading, to such a point that immediate perceptual confusion and subsequent disorientation usually occur [39–41, 52, 53]. Many astronauts suddenly feel as if they are upside-down or may even have difficulty sensing the location of their own arms and legs. This disorientation is described as space adaptation syndrome (SAS) and is widely recognized as the main cause of space motion sickness (SMS) [41–44]. The exposure to microgravity and the space environment during short- and long-­ duration space missions has important medical and health implications in astronauts [47–51]. These include neuro-vestibular problems, involving space motion sickness and disorientation during the flight, and impaired balance and neuromuscular

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coordination after landing, cardiovascular and fluid-related problems of orthostatic hypotension immediately following spaceflight, the possibility of altered cardiac susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmias, and reduced cardiac muscle mass and diminished cardiac function, muscle-related problems of atrophy, involving loss of muscle mass, strength and endurance, decrease in the bone mineral density, circadian rhythm-related problems, involving sleep and performance, and immune-­ related problems, involving infections and immunodeficiency [39, 40, 45, 54–56]. Sensory-motor control deconditioning is one of the most critical effects to consider as it leads to deconditioning of posture and gait controls during long range m ­ issions [57–61].

Intervening in the Brain There are approximately 100 billion neurons in the brain, residing in a complex network of non-neuronal cells called glia. While there are ten times more glia cells than neurons, it is the neurons that are responsible for sensing changes in the environment, communicating these changes to other neurons, and commanding the responses of the body to them [81–84]. Neurons are. specialized in complex ways to fulfill particular functions: the number, length, and pattern of extensions (axons and dendrites) that extend from their cell bodies; the connections they make with other neurons; the neurotransmitters that they release to pass on information; and the surface channels and receptors, selectively sensitive to particular chemicals [84–88]. These are just some of the features that distinguish individual neurons. Glia appear more uniform, though they too contribute to information processing in individual ways [1, 89, 90]. The three main types of glia are astrocytes, which regulate the chemical environment between neurons; oligodendrocytes, which provide electrical insulation; and microglia, the resident immune cells of the brain, which clean up debris and react to disruptions in brain homeostasis such as those caused by brain damage. There may be some symptoms that imply a brain tumor; these include: • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Headaches. Seizures (convulsion or fits). Nausea and vomiting. Changes to eyesight. Drowsiness/lethargy. Changes in personality. Language problems/slurring speech. Co-ordination problems. Dizziness. Difficulty swallowing. Problems with smell, hearing, and sight. Inability to gaze upwards. Changes in facial expression.

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Symptoms that relate to spinal cord tumors include: • • • •

Pain. Numbness. Weakness in either the arms or legs. Loss of bladder or bowel control.

There are four categories of technology initiatives to intervene in the brain. They include (1) transcranial brain stimulation (TBS), (2) deep brain stimulation, DBS, (3) brain-computer Interface, BCIs, and (4) neural stem cell therapy, NSCT, respectively. None of these technology initiatives has provided any cure for neurological or mental health disorders, but they could ameliorate symptoms or fulfil assistive roles in ways that help improve the quality of life of patients [105–109]. The technology initiative involving transcranial brain stimulation (TBS) depicts the methodology of stimulating the brain either by inducing an electrical field using a magnetic coil placed against the head (transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)) or by applying weak electrical currents via electrodes on the scalp (transcranial direct current stimulation (TDCS) and transcranial alternating current stimulation (TACS)). However, their therapeutic applications are still being explored, where the most established application is in treating drug-resistant depression. The exact mechanisms by which TBS achieves its therapeutic effects are still being researched. The initiative involving deep brain stimulation (DBS) depicts a process that alters the functioning of brain cells and neural networks by using electrical currents, but in this case, the stimulation is delivered by electrodes implanted deep in the brain. The applications of this methodology in therapeutic interventions include the treatment of movement disorders, such as those associated with Parkinson’s disease, and of neuropathic pain. There is also considerable research activity exploring its use to treat a wide range of psychiatric disorders. The exact mechanisms by which DBS achieves its therapeutic effects are still unknown. The technology initiative involving the brain-computer interface, or BCI, uses electrodes (either implanted in the brain or resting on the scalp) to record the brain signals of the user, which are then translated into commands to operate computer-­ controlled devices. By actively producing brain signals, users may be able to control these devices. BCIs could in principle assist users to communicate, control prostheses or wheelchairs, support rehabilitation, or facilitate the detection of consciousness. This initiative exhibits potential application for those with paralysis. However, the therapeutic application of BCIs is still confined to research contexts, in which non-invasive techniques are the most prevalent. The technology initiative involving the neural stem cell therapy, or NSCT, involves the injection of stem cells into the brain in order to repair damage caused by acute events such as stroke or neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease. However, this initiative may still be at an early phase of development. The precise ways in which stem cell grafts may assist in repairing lost brain tissue are not known, but these could include direct replacement of lost cells or stimulating repair by the brain itself.

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Nonetheless, our understanding of the brain has improved dramatically in recent years, in part because of the development of fMRI scanners, which produce the familiar striking images of brain activity and provide suggestive hints concerning the basis of neurological disorders. Some of the technology initiatives involve interventions in the brain, some requiring invasive physical intrusions into the brain, others relying on methods of interacting with the brain from outside, typically by exposing the brain to electromagnetic fields. Furthermore, some of these initiatives are still at an early experimental stage (such as the introduction of human neural stem cells into the brain), while others build on existing techniques (such as deep brain stimulation) to provide treatments for further neurological and psychiatric disorders, which at present lack safe and effective treatments. In fact, these technological initiatives involve interventions in the brain, the organ that furnishes us with the capacities that underpin our existence, personal and social; interventions here are liable to affect our lives in the most intimate and fundamental ways. So, while the aim of these interventions is to meet the need for neurological and psychiatric therapies, there is always the risk of damaging side effects. And despite recent advances in neuroscience, this risk has to be taken seriously because of the limited knowledge of the ways in which these new technologies affect the brain. There exist serious uncertainties about the long-term and unintended effects of these technological initiatives of intervening in the brain. There may be a lack of alternative treatments for some neurological disorders. Besides, many initiatives only address conditions that impair the decision-making capacities of the patients [1]. The lack of clear evidence of risks and benefits of some interventional techniques also presents challenges to responsible clinical decision-making. Data concerning brain function and neurological health collected by devices such as those delivering DBS or BCIs may be sensitive and stigmatizing. These technology initiatives come with very hard problems that need to be addressed. These hard problems may include demand for much more basic science and technology. These may include supporting frail people and people with dementia, aphasia following a stroke, memory loss within the community, and transportation and care for those with failing senses and slowing reaction times. The unmet and/or unfulfilled needs and wants of elderly and disabled people may lead directly to the need for new basic and strategic science and technology, which may include new materials, new sensors, a greater understanding of degenerating cognitive and physical processes, and methodologies for modeling and supporting these processes using technology. There arises the need for much more sophisticated basic social science [93–97]. And there exists a link with the need to know far more about the effects of ageing on sensory, cognitive, memory, and physical skills and how to compensate for them. It may be important to know much more about how people actually want their quality of life to improve, and a focus on people with special needs helps us learn how to ask these questions [96–99]. There are very real challenges for a whole range of social, scientific, and technological research at all levels: basic, strategic, and

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applied. Very real possibilities of exciting and innovative solutions may lead to technology initiatives that may include: (1) responding to the needs of ageing populations, with research into ageing and disabling diseases, coupled with technologies for maintaining independence and a reasonable quality of life and (2) neuroscience and cognitive science research into progressive degenerative disease and age-related cognitive decline [100–104]. These new technologies may include engineering, biological sciences, psychology, social sciences, mathematical techniques, artificial/ computational intelligence, etc. They may offer insight and manifest our intelligence into the neural control of the locomotor system in space.

 thical Concerns and Challenges of New E Technology Initiatives The fact is that the brain is one of the most important organs in the body. This brain is in charge of biological and neurological procedures such as memory, speech, perception, sleep, and emotion. The technological initiatives depict a scientific approach that fuses and/or integrates electronic devices with the nervous system. These technology initiatives may give rise to some interesting but complex ethical and legal issues by virtue of the creation of an interface between the brain and computers, the brain-computer interface [1]. Whereas the advocates of these initiatives propose that the new technologies may enable humans to overcome diseases and disorders ranging from Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s disease, blindness, anxiety, depression, and insomnia, the opponents argue that these initiatives may be overly invasive and could create unanticipated complications. The technology initiative involving the transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has provoked some excitement in the role of brain stimulation in psychiatric disorders. Some studies have illustrated promising but not conclusive evidence for the efficacy of TMS in treating depression. And TMS has not been shown to be effective in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder, posttraumatic disorder, or schizophrenia. There may be the urgent requirement to develop further consensus on some parameters in TMS studies, including the shape of the coil, the coil-cortex distance, the motor threshold, the low-frequency versus high-frequency stimulation, and the location of the correct point of stimulation for each disorders. Brain implants also involve the merging of microchips and artificial intelligence. This technology may be relatively new and still untested. Therefore, there may arise multiple ethical and legal issues: (1) privacy concerns may arise, (2) the identity of the individual may be stolen without permission, (3) the autonomy of the individual could be taken away, and (4) the culprits (for example, hackers) may exploit the technology and manipulate individuals for self-serving purposes. A very significant ethical issue that these technology initiatives introduce may be exhibited through the degree of harm the users may experience through the use of

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the brain microchip. There is the possibility that the users would experience an immediate adverse reaction (e.g., infection and burn) as soon as the microchip is implemented into their brain. However, there could also be undetectable adverse reactions such as cognitive distortions, which may be more difficult to evaluate. For example, there could be sudden and unanticipated mood changes or emotional reactions, which may take more time to assess.

Stigmatization Stigma may be described as the way the social status and sense of self of an individual may be tainted and devalued after being linked with a disease, disorder or impairment that has negative social connotations. There may be, at least, three types of stigma that affect persons with neurological, degenerative diseases or dementia. The public stigma may be described as the negative or pejorative beliefs of members of the general public [19]. These beliefs may cause them to behave in discriminatory, exclusionary, or patronizing ways toward either the patients themselves, or towards persons closely associated with the patients. Public stigma may be overt, like discrimination, although other times it may be subtler, like a prejudicial belief that a patient is incompetent [20]. Individuals living with an impairment, disability or disorder may experience self-stigma. This self-stigma may be characterized by the manner in which an individual cognitively or emotionally absorbs negative beliefs, attitudes, assumptions, and stereotypes related to the disorder, such as feeling ashamed and inferior because of being associated with the disease [21]. Self-stigma may lead to depression, avoidant coping, social withdrawal, low self-esteem, hopelessness, worsened psychiatric symptoms, and decreased help-seeking behaviors. Care-givers and family members may also experience stigma. This type of stigma, the Spillover stigma, seeks to describe the way and manner in which people who do not have any disability nor disorders, are affected by the stigma related to the disease. The spillover stigma often affects individuals who share close social proximity to those who have the disease, such as the care-givers. As a result of spillover stigma, individuals may experience many of the same social and psychological consequences as individuals with disabilities or disorders. In general, some of the other harmful effects of stigmatization may include: • • • •

Reluctance to seek help or treatment and less likely to stay with treatment. Social isolation. Lack of understanding by family, friends, co-workers, or others. Fewer opportunities for work, school or social activities or trouble finding housing. • Bullying, physical violence or harassment. • Health insurance that does not adequately cover your mental illness treatment. • The belief that you will never succeed at certain challenges or that you can’t improve your situation.

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Stigmatization and discrimination may contribute to worsening symptoms and reduced likelihood of getting treatment. In fact, stigmatization may lead to negative effects on recovery among patients mainly due to lower self-esteem, difficulties with social relationships and reduced hope, among other effects.

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Chapter 4

The Physical Determinants of Human Locomotor System

Human locomotion consists of cyclic events controlled by central pattern-­generating networks (CPGs) that are located to a large extent within the spinal cord, but are under the continuous influence of peripheral and descending signals [1, 2]. CPGs output complex patterns of muscle activity and regulate phase relations among different muscle groups. The basic unit of human locomotion is the gait cycle, which is typically recorded from the time one foot strikes the ground until that episode recurs and starts the next, repeating cycle. During one gait cycle, the body traverses a distance of one stride. Each stride is made up of one step by each foot, and these two steps are normally symmetrical in length. The gait cycle is divided into segments (Fig. 4.1) that serve specific functions, each for a limited time during the gait cycle. Each lower limb supports the body during its stance phase and then leaves the floor for its swing phase, during which it advances (or steps). Although the swing phase is the “motion” portion of the gait cycle, one must remember that the horizontal push for the forward motion is the responsibility of the contralateral limb, which is in stance [2–4]. This forward push requires adequate friction between the foot and the walking surface so that hip extension torques are translated into forward propulsion of the pelvis and swing limb. The basic function of walking involves each foot in turn either advancing forward as a step or supporting the body weight and balancing during the advancement of the contralateral lower limb  [23, 25]. A period of double-limb stance (DLS) occurs between each step. During DLS, the weight is transferred from one foot to the other in a complex coordinated pattern known as weight acceptance (WA) (or loading) and weight release (pre-swing) for each of the respective limbs (see Fig.4.2). During each gait cycle, a carefully timed pattern of acceleration and deceleration is produced by the muscles. This muscle activity must overcome gravity, as represented by the vertical component of the ground reaction force (GRF), and provide forward propulsion [2, 5, 6, 32]. The entire body is seen to be involved in the gait © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 T. Sarkodie-Gyan, H. Yu, The Human Locomotor System, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32781-0_4

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Gait Cycle Stance

Periods: Tasks: Phases:

Weight Acceptance Initial Contact

Loading Response

Swing Limb Advancement

Single Limb Support

Mid Stance

Terminal Stance

Pre Swing

Initial Swing

Mid Swing

Terminal Swing

Fig. 4.1  Periods of the gait cycle

Fig. 4.2  Gait cycle and its phases. The illustration shows the representative instantaneous position of the limbs corresponding to each phase of the gait cycle

cycle, with movement occurring simultaneously in each of the three planes of movement, as well as each of the three axes of rotation. These six degrees of freedom of movement need to be considered throughout the gait cycle [2, 7, 15]. For convenience in understanding, the gait cycle is divided into natural sub-units called phases that have distinct functions in the gait cycle and have both propulsion and control aspects [16–18, 21, 23].

Description of the Gait Cycle According to Fig. 4.2 The stance phase of the gait cycle begins with the period of weight acceptance, or the loading. It constitutes a decelerating portion of the gait cycle where the foot must stop after traveling at about 4  m/s during the end of the swing phase. This

Description of the Gait Cycle According to Fig.